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28526 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
77a7bb3da2 psql: Improve spelling 2015-12-03 10:23:59 -05:00
a2983cfd9d Fix broken subroutine call in TestLib
Michael Paquier
2015-12-02 23:16:22 -03:00
d8ff060ecd Fix behavior of printTable() and friends with externally-invoked pager.
The formatting modes that depend on knowledge of the terminal window width
did not work right when printing a query result that's been fetched in
sections (as a result of FETCH_SIZE).  ExecQueryUsingCursor() would force
use of the pager as soon as there's more than one result section, and then
print.c would see an output file pointer that's not stdout and incorrectly
conclude that the terminal window width isn't relevant.

This has been broken all along for non-expanded "wrapped" output format,
and as of 9.5 the issue affects expanded mode as well.  The problem also
caused "\pset expanded auto" mode to invariably *not* switch to expanded
output in a segmented result, which seems to me to be exactly backwards.

To fix, we need to pass down an "is_pager" flag to inform the print.c
subroutines that some calling level has already replaced stdout with a
pager pipe, so they should (a) not do that again and (b) nonetheless honor
the window size.  (Notably, this makes the first is_pager test in
print_aligned_text() not be dead code anymore.)

This patch is a bit invasive because there are so many existing calls of
printQuery()/printTable(), but fortunately all but a couple can just pass
"false" for the added parameter.

Back-patch to 9.5 but no further.  Given the lack of field complaints,
it's not clear that we should change the behavior in stable branches.
Also, the API change for printQuery()/printTable() might possibly break
third-party code, again something we don't like to do in stable branches.
However, it's not quite too late to do this in 9.5, and with the larger
scope of the problem there, it seems worth doing.
2015-12-02 18:20:41 -05:00
1caef31d9e Refactor Perl test code
The original code was a bit clunky; make it more amenable for further
reuse by creating a new Perl package PostgresNode, which is an
object-oriented representation of a single server, with some support
routines such as init, start, stop, psql.  This serves as a better basis
on which to build further test code, and enables writing tests that use
more than one server without too much complication.

This commit modifies a lot of the existing test files, mostly to remove
explicit calls to system commands (pg_ctl) replacing them with method
calls of a PostgresNode object.  The result is quite a bit more
straightforward.

Also move some initialization code to BEGIN and INIT blocks instead of
having it straight in as top-level code.

This commit also introduces package RecursiveCopy so that we can copy
whole directories without having to depend on packages that may not be
present on vanilla Perl 5.8 installations.

I also ran perltidy on the modified files, which changes some code sites
that are not otherwise touched by this patch.  I tried to avoid this,
but it ended up being more trouble than it's worth.

Authors: Michael Paquier, Álvaro Herrera
Review: Noah Misch
2015-12-02 18:46:16 -03:00
c7485a82c3 Add handling for GatherPath to print_path.
Peter Geoghegan
2015-12-02 08:19:50 -05:00
7fb008c5ee Make gincostestimate() cope with hypothetical GIN indexes.
We tried to fetch statistics data from the index metapage, which does not
work if the index isn't actually present.  If the index is hypothetical,
instead extrapolate some plausible internal statistics based on the index
page count provided by the index-advisor plugin.

There was already some code in gincostestimate() to invent internal stats
in this way, but since it was only meant as a stopgap for pre-9.1 GIN
indexes that hadn't been vacuumed since upgrading, it was pretty crude.
If we want it to support index advisors, we should try a little harder.
A small amount of testing says that it's better to estimate the entry pages
as 90% of the index, not 100%.  Also, estimating the number of entries
(keys) as equal to the heap tuple count could be wildly wrong in either
direction.  Instead, let's estimate 100 entries per entry page.

Perhaps someday somebody will want the index advisor to be able to provide
these numbers more directly, but for the moment this should serve.

Problem report and initial patch by Julien Rouhaud; modified by me to
invent less-bogus internal statistics.  Back-patch to all supported
branches, since we've supported index advisors since 9.0.
2015-12-01 16:24:34 -05:00
95708e1d8e Further tweaking of print_aligned_vertical().
Don't force the data width to extend all the way to the right margin if it
doesn't need to.  This reverts the behavior in non-wrapping cases to be
what it was in 9.4.  Also, make the logic that ensures the data line width
is at least equal to the record-header line width a little less obscure.

In passing, avoid possible calculation of log10(0).  Probably that's
harmless, given the lack of field complaints, but it seems risky:
conversion of NaN to an integer isn't well defined.
2015-12-01 14:47:13 -05:00
db4a5cfc76 Use "g" not "f" format in ecpg's PGTYPESnumeric_from_double().
The previous coding could overrun the provided buffer size for a very large
input, or lose precision for a very small input.  Adopt the methodology
that's been in use in the equivalent backend code for a long time.

Per private report from Bas van Schaik.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.
2015-12-01 11:42:25 -05:00
2287b87454 Further adjustment to psql's print_aligned_vertical() function.
We should ignore output_columns unless it's greater than zero.
A zero means we couldn't get any information from ioctl(TIOCGWINSZ);
in that case the expected behavior is to print the data at native width,
not to wrap it at the smallest possible value.  print_aligned_text()
gets this consideration right, but print_aligned_vertical() lost track
of this detail somewhere along the line.
2015-12-01 11:07:51 -05:00
e50cda7840 Use pg_rewind when target timeline was switched
Allow pg_rewind to work when target timeline was switched. Now
user can return promoted standby to old master.

Target timeline history becomes a global variable. Index
in target timeline history is used in function interfaces instead of
specifying TLI directly. Thus, SimpleXLogPageRead() can easily start
reading XLOGs from next timeline when current timeline ends.

Author: Alexander Korotkov
Review: Michael Paquier
2015-12-01 18:56:44 +03:00
0e0776bc99 Rework wrap-width calculation in psql's print_aligned_vertical() function.
This area was rather heavily whacked around in 6513633b9 and follow-on
commits, and it was showing it, because the logic to calculate the
allowable data width in wrapped expanded mode had only the vaguest
relationship to the logic that was actually printing the data.  It was
not very close to being right about the conditions requiring overhead
columns to be added.  Aside from being wrong, it was pretty unreadable
and under-commented.  Rewrite it so it corresponds to what the printing
code actually does.

In passing, remove a couple of dead tests in the printing logic, too.

Per a complaint from Jeff Janes, though this doesn't look much like his
patch because it fixes a number of other corner-case bogosities too.
One such fix that's visible in the regression test results is that
although the code was attempting to enforce a minimum data width of
3 columns, it sometimes left less space than that available.
2015-11-30 17:53:32 -05:00
3690dc6b03 Fix obsolete comment.
It's amazing how fast things become obsolete these days.

Amit Langote
2015-11-30 12:54:46 -05:00
ec7eef6b11 Avoid caching expression state trees for domain constraints across queries.
In commit 8abb3cda0d I attempted to cache
the expression state trees constructed for domain CHECK constraints for
the life of the backend (assuming the domain's constraints don't get
redefined).  However, this turns out not to work very well, because
execQual.c will run those state trees with ecxt_per_query_memory pointing
to a query-lifespan context, and in some situations we'll end up with
pointers into that context getting stored into the state trees.  This
happens in particular with SQL-language functions, as reported by
Emre Hasegeli, but there are many other cases.

To fix, keep only the expression plan trees for domain CHECK constraints
in the typcache's data structure, and revert to performing ExecInitExpr
(at least) once per query to set up expression state trees in the query's
context.

Eventually it'd be nice to undo this, but that will require some careful
thought about memory management for expression state trees, and it seems
far too late for any such redesign in 9.5.  This way is still much more
efficient than what happened before 8abb3cda0.
2015-11-29 18:18:42 -05:00
8d32717b6b Avoid doing encoding conversions by double-conversion via MULE_INTERNAL.
Previously, we did many conversions for Cyrillic and Central European
single-byte encodings by converting to a related MULE_INTERNAL coding
scheme before converting to the destination.  This seems unnecessarily
inefficient.  Moreover, if the conversion encounters an untranslatable
character, the error message will confusingly complain about failure
to convert to or from MULE_INTERNAL, rather than the user-visible
encodings.  Worse still, this approach results in some completely
unnecessary conversion failures; there are cases where the chosen
MULE subset lacks characters that exist in both of the user-visible
encodings, causing a conversion failure that need not occur.

This patch fixes the first two of those deficiencies by introducing
a new local2local() conversion support subroutine for direct conversion
between any two single-byte character sets, and adding new conversion
tables where needed.  However, I generated the new conversion tables by
testing PG 9.5's behavior, so that the actual conversion behavior is
bug-compatible with previous releases; the only user-visible behavior
change is that the error messages for conversion failures are saner.
Changes in the conversion behavior will probably ensue after discussion.

Interestingly, although this approach requires more tables, the .so files
actually end up smaller (at least on my x86_64 machine); the tables are
smaller than the management code needed for double conversion.

Per a complaint from Albe Laurenz.
2015-11-28 13:42:27 -05:00
5afdfc9cbb Update UCS_to_GB18030.pl with info about origin of the reference file. 2015-11-27 17:31:26 -05:00
e17dab53ea Auto-generate file header comments in Unicode mapping files.
Some of the Unicode/*.map files had identification comments added to them,
evidently by hand.  Others did not.  Modify the generating scripts to
produce these comments automatically, and update the generated files that
lacked them.

This is just minor cleanup as a by-product of trying to verify that the
*.map files can indeed be reproduced from authoritative data.  There are a
depressingly large number that fail to reproduce from the claimed sources.
I have not touched those in this commit, except for the JIS 2004-related
files which required only a single comment update to match.

Since this only affects comments, no need to consider a back-patch.
2015-11-27 16:50:47 -05:00
40cb21f70b Improve PQhost() to return useful data for default Unix-socket connections.
Previously, if no host information had been specified at connection time,
PQhost() would return NULL (unless you are on Windows, in which case you
got "localhost").  This is an unhelpful definition for a couple of reasons:
it can cause corner-case crashes in applications (cf commit c5ef8ce53d),
and there's no well-defined way for applications to find out the socket
directory path that's actually in use.  As an example of the latter
problem, psql substituted DEFAULT_PGSOCKET_DIR for NULL in a couple of
places, but this is subtly wrong because it's conceivable that psql is
using a libpq shared library that was built with a different setting.

Hence, change PQhost() to return DEFAULT_PGSOCKET_DIR when appropriate,
and strip out the now-dead substitutions in psql.  (There is still one
remaining reference to DEFAULT_PGSOCKET_DIR in psql, in prompt.c, which
I don't see a nice way to get rid of.  But it only controls a prompt
abbreviation decision, so it seems noncritical.)

Also update the docs for PQhost, which had never previously mentioned
the possibility of a socket directory path being returned.  In passing
fix the outright-incorrect code comment about PGconn.pgunixsocket.
2015-11-27 14:13:53 -05:00
92e38182d7 COPY (INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE .. RETURNING ..)
Attached is a patch for being able to do COPY (query) without a CTE.

Author: Marko Tiikkaja
Review: Michael Paquier
2015-11-27 19:11:22 +03:00
0da3a9bef7 Fix failure to consider failure cases in GetComboCommandId().
Failure to initially palloc the comboCids array, or to realloc it bigger
when needed, left combocid's data structures in an inconsistent state that
would cause trouble if the top transaction continues to execute.  Noted
while examining a user complaint about the amount of memory used for this.
(There's not much we can do about that, but it does point up that repalloc
failure has a non-negligible chance of occurring here.)

In HEAD/9.5, also avoid possible invocation of memcpy() with a null pointer
in SerializeComboCIDState; cf commit 13bba0227.
2015-11-26 13:23:02 -05:00
c5ef8ce53d Be more paranoid about null return values from libpq status functions.
PQhost() can return NULL in non-error situations, namely when a Unix-socket
connection has been selected by default.  That behavior is a tad debatable
perhaps, but for the moment we should make sure that psql copes with it.
Unfortunately, do_connect() failed to: it could pass a NULL pointer to
strcmp(), resulting in crashes on most platforms.  This was reported as a
security issue by ChenQin of Topsec Security Team, but the consensus of
the security list is that it's just a garden-variety bug with no security
implications.

For paranoia's sake, I made the keep_password test not trust PQuser or
PQport either, even though I believe those will never return NULL given
a valid PGconn.

Back-patch to all supported branches.
2015-11-25 17:31:53 -05:00
46166197c3 Improve div_var_fast(), mostly by making comments better.
The integer overflow situation in div_var_fast() is a great deal more
complicated than the pre-existing comments would suggest.  Moreover, the
comments were also flat out incorrect as to the precise statement of the
maxdiv loop invariant.  Upon clarifying that, it becomes apparent that the
way in which we updated maxdiv after a carry propagation pass was overly
slow, complex, and conservative: we can just reset it to one, which is much
easier and also reduces the number of times carry propagation occurs.
Fix that and improve the relevant comments.

Since this is mostly a comment fix, with only a rather marginal performance
boost, no need for back-patch.

Tom Lane and Dean Rasheed
2015-11-25 16:05:57 -05:00
13b30c16f3 pg_upgrade: fix CopyFile() on Windows to fail on file existence
Also fix getErrorText() to return the right error string on failure.
This behavior now matches that of other operating systems.

Report by Noah Misch

Backpatch through 9.1
2015-11-24 17:18:28 -05:00
00cdd83521 Adopt the GNU convention for handling tar-archive members exceeding 8GB.
The POSIX standard for tar headers requires archive member sizes to be
printed in octal with at most 11 digits, limiting the representable file
size to 8GB.  However, GNU tar and apparently most other modern tars
support a convention in which oversized values can be stored in base-256,
allowing any practical file to be a tar member.  Adopt this convention
to remove two limitations:
* pg_dump with -Ft output format failed if the contents of any one table
exceeded 8GB.
* pg_basebackup failed if the data directory contained any file exceeding
8GB.  (This would be a fatal problem for installations configured with a
table segment size of 8GB or more, and it has also been seen to fail when
large core dump files exist in the data directory.)

File sizes under 8GB are still printed in octal, so that no compatibility
issues are created except in cases that would have failed entirely before.

In addition, this patch fixes several bugs in the same area:

* In 9.3 and later, we'd defined tarCreateHeader's file-size argument as
size_t, which meant that on 32-bit machines it would write a corrupt tar
header for file sizes between 4GB and 8GB, even though no error was raised.
This broke both "pg_dump -Ft" and pg_basebackup for such cases.

* pg_restore from a tar archive would fail on tables of size between 4GB
and 8GB, on machines where either "size_t" or "unsigned long" is 32 bits.
This happened even with an archive file not affected by the previous bug.

* pg_basebackup would fail if there were files of size between 4GB and 8GB,
even on 64-bit machines.

* In 9.3 and later, "pg_basebackup -Ft" failed entirely, for any file size,
on 64-bit big-endian machines.

In view of these potential data-loss bugs, back-patch to all supported
branches, even though removal of the documented 8GB limit might otherwise
be considered a new feature rather than a bug fix.
2015-11-21 20:21:31 -05:00
074c5cfbfb Fix handling of inherited check constraints in ALTER COLUMN TYPE (again).
The previous way of reconstructing check constraints was to do a separate
"ALTER TABLE ONLY tab ADD CONSTRAINT" for each table in an inheritance
hierarchy.  However, that way has no hope of reconstructing the check
constraints' own inheritance properties correctly, as pointed out in
bug #13779 from Jan Dirk Zijlstra.  What we should do instead is to do
a regular "ALTER TABLE", allowing recursion, at the topmost table that
has a particular constraint, and then suppress the work queue entries
for inherited instances of the constraint.

Annoyingly, we'd tried to fix this behavior before, in commit 5ed6546cf,
but we failed to notice that it wasn't reconstructing the pg_constraint
field values correctly.

As long as I'm touching pg_get_constraintdef_worker anyway, tweak it to
always schema-qualify the target table name; this seems like useful backup
to the protections installed by commit 5f173040.

In HEAD/9.5, get rid of get_constraint_relation_oids, which is now unused.
(I could alternatively have modified it to also return conislocal, but that
seemed like a pretty single-purpose API, so let's not pretend it has some
other use.)  It's unused in the back branches as well, but I left it in
place just in case some third-party code has decided to use it.

In HEAD/9.5, also rename pg_get_constraintdef_string to
pg_get_constraintdef_command, as the previous name did nothing to explain
what that entry point did differently from others (and its comment was
equally useless).  Again, that change doesn't seem like material for
back-patching.

I did a bit of re-pgindenting in tablecmds.c in HEAD/9.5, as well.

Otherwise, back-patch to all supported branches.
2015-11-20 14:55:47 -05:00
6c878a7553 Avoid server crash when worker registration fails at execution time.
The previous coding attempts to destroy the DSM in this case, but
child nodes might have stored data there and still be holding onto
pointers in this case.  So don't do that.

Also, free the reader array instead of leaking it.

Extracted from two different patch versions both by Amit Kapila.
2015-11-20 13:03:39 -05:00
74d0d5f3eb Fix typo in comment.
Amit Langote
2015-11-19 16:45:39 -05:00
fea2b642fd Remove numbers from incorrectly-numbered list.
Reported by Andres Freund.
2015-11-19 16:45:13 -05:00
9be3a4e24d Fix thinko: errmsg -> ereport.
Silly mistake in my commit 09cecdf285, reported by Erik Rijkers.

The fact that the buildfarm didn't find this implies that we are not
testing Perl builds that lack MULTIPLICITY, which is a bit disturbing
from a coverage standpoint.  Until today I'd have said nobody cared
about such configurations anymore; but maybe not.
2015-11-19 14:16:39 -05:00
bc4996e61b Make ALTER .. SET SCHEMA do nothing, instead of throwing an ERROR.
This was already true for CREATE EXTENSION, but historically has not
been true for other object types.  Therefore, this is a backward
incompatibility.  Per discussion on pgsql-hackers, everyone seems to
agree that the new behavior is better.

Marti Raudsepp, reviewed by Haribabu Kommi and myself
2015-11-19 10:49:25 -05:00
f11c557e92 fix a perl typo 2015-11-19 02:42:02 -05:00
d835dd6685 Improve vcregress.pl's handling of tap tests for client programs
The target is now named 'bincheck' rather than 'tapcheck' so that it
reflects what is checked instead of the test mechanism. Some of the
logic is improved, making it easier to add further sets of TAP based
tests in future. Also, the environment setting logic is imrpoved.

As discussed on -hackers a couple of months ago.
2015-11-18 22:47:41 -05:00
7907a949ab Fix incomplete set_foreignscan_references handling for fdw_recheck_quals
KaiGai Kohei
2015-11-18 22:12:21 -05:00
d3c8ac114f Remove function names from some elog() calls in heapam.c.
At least one of the names was, due to a function renaming late in the
development of ON CONFLICT, wrong. Since including function names in
error messages is against the message style guide anyway, remove them
from the messages.

Discussion: CAM3SWZT8paz=usgMVHm0XOETkQvzjRtAUthATnmaHQQY0obnGw@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: 9.5, where ON CONFLICT was introduced
2015-11-19 01:37:58 +01:00
166b61a88e Avoid aggregating worker instrumentation multiple times.
Amit Kapila, per design ideas from me.
2015-11-18 12:35:25 -05:00
adeee97486 Fix dumb bug in tqueue.c
When I wrote this code originally, the intention was to recompute the
remapinfo only when the tupledesc changes.  This presumably only
happens once per query, but I copied the design pattern from other
DestReceivers.  However, due to a silly oversight on my part,
tqueue->tupledesc never got set, leading to recomputation for every
tuple.

This should improve the performance of parallel scans that return a
significant number of tuples.

Report by Amit Kapila; patch by me, reviewed by him.
2015-11-18 08:25:33 -05:00
5f10b7a604 Fix possible internal overflow in numeric division.
div_var_fast() postpones propagating carries in the same way as mul_var(),
so it has the same corner-case overflow risk we fixed in 246693e5ae,
namely that the size of the carries has to be accounted for when setting
the threshold for executing a carry propagation step.  We've not devised
a test case illustrating the brokenness, but the required fix seems clear
enough.  Like the previous fix, back-patch to all active branches.

Dean Rasheed
2015-11-17 15:46:47 -05:00
c5ec406412 Message style fix
from Euler Taveira
2015-11-17 06:53:07 -05:00
5be5b5029f Improve message 2015-11-16 22:26:32 -05:00
5db837d3f2 Message improvements 2015-11-16 21:39:23 -05:00
e93b62985f Remove volatile qualifiers from bufmgr.c and freelist.c
Prior to commit 0709b7ee72, access to
variables within a spinlock-protected critical section had to be done
through a volatile pointer, but that should no longer be necessary.

Review by Andres Freund
2015-11-16 18:50:06 -05:00
8004953b5a Speed up ruleutils' name de-duplication code, and fix overlength-name case.
Since commit 11e131854f, ruleutils.c has
attempted to ensure that each RTE in a query or plan tree has a unique
alias name.  However, the code that was added for this could be quite slow,
even as bad as O(N^3) if N identical RTE names must be replaced, as noted
by Jeff Janes.  Improve matters by building a transient hash table within
set_rtable_names.  The hash table in itself reduces the cost of detecting a
duplicate from O(N) to O(1), and we can save another factor of N by storing
the number of de-duplicated names already created for each entry, so that
we don't have to re-try names already created.  This way is probably a bit
slower overall for small range tables, but almost by definition, such cases
should not be a performance problem.

In principle the same problem applies to the column-name-de-duplication
code; but in practice that seems to be less of a problem, first because
N is limited since we don't support extremely wide tables, and second
because duplicate column names within an RTE are fairly rare, so that in
practice the cost is more like O(N^2) not O(N^3).  It would be very much
messier to fix the column-name code, so for now I've left that alone.

An independent problem in the same area was that the de-duplication code
paid no attention to the identifier length limit, and would happily produce
identifiers that were longer than NAMEDATALEN and wouldn't be unique after
truncation to NAMEDATALEN.  This could result in dump/reload failures, or
perhaps even views that silently behaved differently than before.  We can
fix that by shortening the base name as needed.  Fix it for both the
relation and column name cases.

In passing, check for interrupts in set_rtable_names, just in case it's
still slow enough to be an issue.

Back-patch to 9.3 where this code was introduced.
2015-11-16 13:45:17 -05:00
179c97bf58 Remove accidentally-committed debugging code.
Amit Kapila
2015-11-15 18:07:57 -05:00
7745bc352a Fix ruleutils.c's dumping of whole-row Vars in ROW() and VALUES() contexts.
Normally ruleutils prints a whole-row Var as "foo.*".  We already knew that
that doesn't work at top level of a SELECT list, because the parser would
treat the "*" as a directive to expand the reference into separate columns,
not a whole-row Var.  However, Joshua Yanovski points out in bug #13776
that the same thing happens at top level of a ROW() construct; and some
nosing around in the parser shows that the same is true in VALUES().
Hence, apply the same workaround already devised for the SELECT-list case,
namely to add a forced cast to the appropriate rowtype in these cases.
(The alternative of just printing "foo" was rejected because it is
difficult to avoid ambiguity against plain columns named "foo".)

Back-patch to all supported branches.
2015-11-15 14:41:09 -05:00
7d9a4737c2 Improve type numeric's calculations for ln(), log(), exp(), pow().
Set the "rscales" for intermediate-result calculations to ensure that
suitable numbers of significant digits are maintained throughout.  The
previous coding hadn't thought this through in any detail, and as a result
could deliver results with many inaccurate digits, or in the worst cases
even fail with divide-by-zero errors as a result of losing all nonzero
digits of intermediate results.

In exp_var(), get rid entirely of the logic that separated the calculation
into integer and fractional parts: that was neither accurate nor
particularly fast.  The existing range-reduction method of dividing by 2^n
can be applied across the full input range instead of only 0..1, as long as
we are careful to set an appropriate rscale for each step.

Also fix the logic in mul_var() for shortening the calculation when the
caller asks for fewer output digits than an exact calculation would
require.  This bug doesn't affect simple multiplications since that code
path asks for an exact result, but it does contribute to accuracy issues
in the transcendental math functions.

In passing, improve performance of mul_var() a bit by forcing the shorter
input to be on the left, thus reducing the number of iterations of the
outer loop and probably also reducing the number of carry-propagation
steps needed.

This is arguably a bug fix, but in view of the lack of field complaints,
it does not seem worth the risk of back-patching.

Dean Rasheed
2015-11-14 14:55:46 -05:00
e57646e962 Fix spelling error in postgresql.conf
Report by Greg Clough
2015-11-14 14:00:17 -05:00
025106e314 pg_upgrade: properly detect file copy failure on Windows
Previously, file copy failures were ignored on Windows due to an
incorrect return value check.

Report by Manu Joye

Backpatch through 9.1
2015-11-14 11:47:12 -05:00
83dec5a712 vacuumdb: don't prompt for passwords over and over
Having the script prompt for passwords over and over was a preexisting
problem when it processed multiple databases or when it processed
multiple analyze stages, but the parallel mode introduced in commit
a179232047 made it worse.

Fix the annoyance by keeping a copy of the password used by the first
connection that requires one.  Since users can (currently) only have a
single password, there's no need for more complex arrangements (such as
remembering one password per database).

Per bug #13741 reported by Eric Brown.  Patch authored and
cross-reviewed by Haribabu Kommi and Michael Paquier, slightly tweaked
by Álvaro Herrera.

Discussion: http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20151027193919.931.54948@wrigleys.postgresql.org
Backpatch to 9.5, where parallel vacuumdb was introduced.
2015-11-12 18:05:23 -03:00
fe702a7b3f Move each SLRU's lwlocks to a separate tranche.
This makes it significantly easier to identify these lwlocks in
LWLOCK_STATS or Trace_lwlocks output.  It's also arguably better
from a modularity standpoint, since lwlock.c no longer needs to
know anything about the LWLock needs of the higher-level SLRU
facility.

Ildus Kurbangaliev, reviewd by Álvaro Herrera and by me.
2015-11-12 14:59:09 -05:00
c405918858 Fix unwanted flushing of libpq's input buffer when socket EOF is seen.
In commit 210eb9b743 I centralized libpq's logic for closing down
the backend communication socket, and made the new pqDropConnection
routine always reset the I/O buffers to empty.  Many of the call sites
previously had not had such code, and while that amounted to an oversight
in some cases, there was one place where it was intentional and necessary
*not* to flush the input buffer: pqReadData should never cause that to
happen, since we probably still want to process whatever data we read.

This is the true cause of the problem Robert was attempting to fix in
c3e7c24a1d, namely that libpq no longer reported the backend's final
ERROR message before reporting "server closed the connection unexpectedly".
But that only accidentally fixed it, by invoking parseInput before the
input buffer got flushed; and very likely there are timing scenarios
where we'd still lose the message before processing it.

To fix, pass a flag to pqDropConnection to tell it whether to flush the
input buffer or not.  On review I think flushing is actually correct for
every other call site.

Back-patch to 9.3 where the problem was introduced.  In HEAD, also improve
the comments added by c3e7c24a1d.
2015-11-12 13:03:52 -05:00
c3e7c24a1d libpq: Notice errors a backend may have sent just before dying.
At least since the introduction of Hot Standby, the backend has
sometimes sent fatal errors even when no client query was in
progress, assuming that the client would receive it.  However,
pqHandleSendFailure was not in sync with this assumption, and
only tries to catch notices and notifies.  Add a parseInput call
to the loop there to fix.

Andres Freund suggested the fix.  Comments are by me.
Reviewed by Michael Paquier.
2015-11-12 09:12:18 -05:00