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2703 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alvaro Herrera
61b24fef89 Fix handling of multixacts predating pg_upgrade
After pg_upgrade, it is possible that some tuples' Xmax have multixacts
corresponding to the old installation; such multixacts cannot have
running members anymore.  In many code sites we already know not to read
them and clobber them silently, but at least when VACUUM tries to freeze
a multixact or determine whether one needs freezing, there's an attempt
to resolve it to its member transactions by calling GetMultiXactIdMembers,
and if the multixact value is "in the future" with regards to the
current valid multixact range, an error like this is raised:
    ERROR:  MultiXactId 123 has not been created yet -- apparent wraparound
and vacuuming fails.  Per discussion with Andrew Gierth, it is completely
bogus to try to resolve multixacts coming from before a pg_upgrade,
regardless of where they stand with regards to the current valid
multixact range.

It's possible to get from under this problem by doing SELECT FOR UPDATE
of the problem tuples, but if tables are large, this is slow and
tedious, so a more thorough solution is desirable.

To fix, we realize that multixacts in xmax created in 9.2 and previous
have a specific bit pattern that is never used in 9.3 and later (we
already knew this, per comments and infomask tests sprinkled in various
places, but we weren't leveraging this knowledge appropriately).
Whenever the infomask of the tuple matches that bit pattern, we just
ignore the multixact completely as if Xmax wasn't set; or, in the case
of tuple freezing, we act as if an unwanted value is set and clobber it
without decoding.  This guarantees that no errors will be raised, and
that the values will be progressively removed until all tables are
clean.  Most callers of GetMultiXactIdMembers are patched to recognize
directly that the value is a removable "empty" multixact and avoid
calling GetMultiXactIdMembers altogether.

To avoid changing the signature of GetMultiXactIdMembers() in back
branches, we keep the "allow_old" boolean flag but rename it to
"from_pgupgrade"; if the flag is true, we always return an empty set
instead of looking up the multixact.  (I suppose we could remove the
argument in the master branch, but I chose not to do so in this commit).

This was broken all along, but the error-facing message appeared first
because of commit 8e9a16ab8f and was partially fixed in a25c2b7c4d.
This fix, backpatched all the way back to 9.3, goes approximately in the
same direction as a25c2b7c4d but should cover all cases.

Bug analysis by Andrew Gierth and Álvaro Herrera.

A number of public reports match this bug:
  https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20140330040029.GY4582@tamriel.snowman.net
  https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/538F3D70.6080902@publicrelay.com
  https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/556439CF.7070109@pscs.co.uk
  https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/SG2PR06MB0760098A111C88E31BD4D96FB3540@SG2PR06MB0760.apcprd06.prod.outlook.com
  https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20160615203829.5798.4594@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2016-06-24 18:29:28 -04:00
Tom Lane
ea2ae830d9 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 20:04:40 -04:00
Tom Lane
e1aecebc04 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
Heikki Linnakangas
a840c14286 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 10:09:01 +03:00
Tom Lane
00456911f4 Fix core dump in ReorderBufferRestoreChange on alignment-picky platforms.
When re-reading an update involving both an old tuple and a new tuple from
disk, reorderbuffer.c was careless about whether the new tuple is suitably
aligned for direct access --- in general, it isn't.  We'd missed seeing
this in the buildfarm because the contrib/test_decoding tests exercise this
code path only a few times, and by chance all of those cases have old
tuples with length a multiple of 4, which is usually enough to make the
access to the new tuple's t_len safe.  For some still-not-entirely-clear
reason, however, Debian's sparc build gets a bus error, as reported by
Christoph Berg; perhaps it's assuming 8-byte alignment of the pointer?

The lack of previous field reports is probably because you need all of
these conditions to trigger a crash: an alignment-picky platform (not
Intel), a transaction large enough to spill to disk, an update within
that xact that changes a primary-key field and has an odd-length old tuple,
and of course logical decoding tracing the transaction.

Avoid the alignment assumption by using memcpy instead of fetching t_len
directly, and add a test case that exposes the crash on picky platforms.
Back-patch to 9.4 where the bug was introduced.

Discussion: <20160413094117.GC21485@msg.credativ.de>
2016-04-14 19:42:22 -04:00
Tom Lane
b190fe95bb Fix phony .PHONY.
A couple makefiles had misspelled the magic .PHONY target as PHONY.
2016-03-19 17:19:37 -04:00
Tom Lane
23cb32660c Fix "pg_bench -C -M prepared".
This didn't work because when we dropped and re-established a database
connection, we did not bother to reset session-specific state such as
the statements-are-prepared flags.

The st->prepared[] array certainly needs to be flushed, and I cleared a
couple of other fields as well that couldn't possibly retain meaningful
state for a new connection.

In passing, fix some bogus comments and strange field order choices.

Per report from Robins Tharakan.
2016-03-16 23:18:07 -04:00
Andres Freund
4f37d09169 Avoid unlikely data-loss scenarios due to rename() without fsync.
Renaming a file using rename(2) is not guaranteed to be durable in face
of crashes. Use the previously added durable_rename()/durable_link_or_rename()
in various places where we previously just renamed files.

Most of the changed call sites are arguably not critical, but it seems
better to err on the side of too much durability.  The most prominent
known case where the previously missing fsyncs could cause data loss is
crashes at the end of a checkpoint. After the actual checkpoint has been
performed, old WAL files are recycled. When they're filled, their
contents are fdatasynced, but we did not fsync the containing
directory. An OS/hardware crash in an unfortunate moment could then end
up leaving that file with its old name, but new content; WAL replay
would thus not replay it.

Reported-By: Tomas Vondra
Author: Michael Paquier, Tomas Vondra, Andres Freund
Discussion: 56583BDD.9060302@2ndquadrant.com
Backpatch: All supported branches
2016-03-09 18:53:54 -08:00
Andres Freund
8457c69fea ltree: Zero padding bytes when allocating memory for externally visible data.
ltree/ltree_gist/ltxtquery's headers stores data at MAXALIGN alignment,
requiring some padding bytes. So far we left these uninitialized. Zero
those by using palloc0.

Author: Andres Freund
Reported-By: Andres Freund / valgrind / buildarm animal skink
Backpatch: 9.1-
2016-03-08 14:59:29 -08:00
Andres Freund
3b94b3a496 logical decoding: Fix handling of large old tuples with replica identity full.
When decoding the old version of an UPDATE or DELETE change, and if that
tuple was bigger than MaxHeapTupleSize, we either Assert'ed out, or
failed in more subtle ways in non-assert builds.  Normally individual
tuples aren't bigger than MaxHeapTupleSize, with big datums toasted.
But that's not the case for the old version of a tuple for logical
decoding; the replica identity is logged as one piece. With the default
replica identity btree limits that to small tuples, but that's not the
case for FULL.

Change the tuple buffer infrastructure to separate allocate over-large
tuples, instead of always going through the slab cache.

This unfortunately requires changing the ReorderBufferTupleBuf
definition, we need to store the allocated size someplace. To avoid
requiring output plugins to recompile, don't store HeapTupleHeaderData
directly after HeapTupleData, but point to it via t_data; that leaves
rooms for the allocated size.  As there's no reason for an output plugin
to look at ReorderBufferTupleBuf->t_data.header, remove the field. It
was just a minor convenience having it directly accessible.

Reported-By: Adam Dratwiński
Discussion: CAKg6ypLd7773AOX4DiOGRwQk1TVOQKhNwjYiVjJnpq8Wo+i62Q@mail.gmail.com
2016-03-05 18:02:20 -08:00
Andres Freund
a50f50a652 logical decoding: old/newtuple in spooled UPDATE changes was switched around.
Somehow I managed to flip the order of restoring old & new tuples when
de-spooling a change in a large transaction from disk. This happens to
only take effect when a change is spooled to disk which has old/new
versions of the tuple. That only is the case for UPDATEs where he
primary key changed or where replica identity is changed to FULL.

The tests didn't catch this because either spooled updates, or updates
that changed primary keys, were tested; not both at the same time.

Found while adding tests for the following commit.

Backpatch: 9.4, where logical decoding was added
2016-03-05 18:02:20 -08:00
Andres Freund
465dd92d98 logical decoding: Tell reorderbuffer about all xids.
Logical decoding's reorderbuffer keeps transactions in an LSN ordered
list for efficiency. To make that's efficiently possible upper-level
xids are forced to be logged before nested subtransaction xids.  That
only works though if these records are all looked at: Unfortunately we
didn't do so for e.g. row level locks, which are otherwise uninteresting
for logical decoding.

This could lead to errors like:
"ERROR: subxact logged without previous toplevel record".

It's not sufficient to just look at row locking records, the xid could
appear first due to a lot of other types of records (which will trigger
the transaction to be marked logged with MarkCurrentTransactionIdLoggedIfAny).
So invent infrastructure to tell reorderbuffer about xids seen, when
they'd otherwise not pass through reorderbuffer.c.

Reported-By: Jarred Ward
Bug: #13844
Discussion: 20160105033249.1087.66040@wrigleys.postgresql.org
Backpatch: 9.4, where logical decoding was added
2016-03-05 18:02:20 -08:00
Andres Freund
d750b20101 Force synchronous_commit=on in test_decoding's concurrent_ddl_dml.spec.
Otherwise running installcheck-force on a server with
synchronous_commit=off will result in the tests failing. All the other
tests already do so...

Backpatch: 9.4, where logical decoding was added
2016-03-03 17:22:25 -08:00
Bruce Momjian
bec4d0ffb2 pg_upgrade: suppress creation of delete script
Suppress creation of the pg_upgrade delete script when the new data
directory is inside the old data directory.

Reported-by: IRC

Backpatch-through: 9.3, where delete script tests were added
2016-02-18 18:32:26 -05:00
Tom Lane
b7547166fe Fix multiple bugs in contrib/pgstattuple's pgstatindex() function.
Dead or half-dead index leaf pages were incorrectly reported as live, as a
consequence of a code rearrangement I made (during a moment of severe brain
fade, evidently) in commit d287818eb5.

The index metapage was not counted in index_size, causing that result to
not agree with the actual index size on-disk.

Index root pages were not counted in internal_pages, which is inconsistent
compared to the case of a root that's also a leaf (one-page index), where
the root would be counted in leaf_pages.  Aside from that inconsistency,
this could lead to additional transient discrepancies between the reported
page counts and index_size, since it's possible for pgstatindex's scan to
see zero or multiple pages marked as BTP_ROOT, if the root moves due to
a split during the scan.  With these fixes, index_size will always be
exactly one page more than the sum of the displayed page counts.

Also, the index_size result was incorrectly documented as being measured in
pages; it's always been measured in bytes.  (While fixing that, I couldn't
resist doing some small additional wordsmithing on the pgstattuple docs.)

Including the metapage causes the reported index_size to not be zero for
an empty index.  To preserve the desired property that the pgstattuple
regression test results are platform-independent (ie, BLCKSZ configuration
independent), scale the index_size result in the regression tests.

The documentation issue was reported by Otsuka Kenji, and the inconsistent
root page counting by Peter Geoghegan; the other problems noted by me.
Back-patch to all supported branches, because this has been broken for
a long time.
2016-02-18 15:40:35 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
ccbb01ff4a pgbench: avoid FD_ISSET on an invalid file descriptor
The original code wasn't careful to test the file descriptor returned by
PQsocket() for an invalid socket.  If an invalid socket did turn up,
that would amount to calling FD_ISSET with fd = -1, whereby undefined
behavior can be invoked.

To fix, test file descriptor for validity and stop further processing if
that fails.

Problem noticed by Coverity.

There is an existing FD_ISSET callsite that does check for invalid
sockets beforehand, but the error message reported by it was
strerror(errno); in testing the aforementioned change, that turns out to
result in "bad socket: Success" which isn't terribly helpful.  Instead
use PQerrorMessage() in both places which is more likely to contain an
useful error message.

Backpatch-through: 9.1.
2016-02-15 20:33:43 -03:00
Robert Haas
2099b911d7 postgres_fdw: Avoid possible misbehavior when RETURNING tableoid column only.
deparseReturningList ended up adding up RETURNING NULL to the code, but
code elsewhere saw an empty list of attributes and concluded that it
should not expect tuples from the remote side.

Etsuro Fujita and Robert Haas, reviewed by Thom Brown
2016-02-04 22:27:47 -05:00
Robert Haas
c33d1a8d52 pgbench: Install guard against overflow when dividing by -1.
Commit 64f5edca24 fixed the same hazard
on master; this is a backport, but the modulo operator does not exist
in older releases.

Michael Paquier
2016-02-03 09:15:29 -05:00
Tom Lane
aa223a037b Fix IsValidJsonNumber() to notice trailing non-alphanumeric garbage.
Commit e09996ff8d was one brick shy of a load: it didn't insist
that the detected JSON number be the whole of the supplied string.
This allowed inputs such as "2016-01-01" to be misdetected as valid JSON
numbers.  Per bug #13906 from Dmitry Ryabov.

In passing, be more wary of zero-length input (I'm not sure this can
happen given current callers, but better safe than sorry), and do some
minor cosmetic cleanup.
2016-02-03 01:39:08 -05:00
Robert Haas
fc5d5e9de7 Fix spelling mistake.
Same patch submitted independently by David Rowley and Peter Geoghegan.
2016-01-14 23:15:27 -05:00
Tom Lane
8c558b2e96 Sort $(wildcard) output where needed for reproducible build output.
The order of inclusion of .o files makes a difference in linker output;
not a functional difference, but still a bitwise difference, which annoys
some packagers who would like reproducible builds.

Report and patch by Christoph Berg
2016-01-05 15:47:05 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
0a29cf693d Add forgotten CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPT calls in pgcrypto's crypt()
Both Blowfish and DES implementations of crypt() can take arbitrarily
long time, depending on the number of rounds specified by the caller;
make sure they can be interrupted.

Author: Andreas Karlsson
Reviewer: Jeff Janes

Backpatch to 9.1.
2015-12-27 13:03:19 -03:00
Bruce Momjian
f91c4e326a 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
Bruce Momjian
87cdfeb18a 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 11:47:11 -05:00
Noah Misch
bed3f6d035 Prevent stack overflow in query-type functions.
The tsquery, ltxtquery and query_int data types have a common ancestor.
Having acquired check_stack_depth() calls independently, each was
missing at least one call.  Back-patch to 9.0 (all supported versions).
2015-10-05 10:06:34 -04:00
Noah Misch
4d95419e8a pgcrypto: Detect and report too-short crypt() salts.
Certain short salts crashed the backend or disclosed a few bytes of
backend memory.  For existing salt-induced error conditions, emit a
message saying as much.  Back-patch to 9.0 (all supported versions).

Josh Kupershmidt

Security: CVE-2015-5288
2015-10-05 10:06:34 -04:00
Tom Lane
93840f96c7 Improve contrib/pg_stat_statements' handling of garbage collection failure.
If we can't read the query texts file (whether because out-of-memory, or
for some other reason), give up and reset the file to empty, discarding all
stored query texts, though not the statistics per se.  We used to leave
things alone and hope for better luck next time, but the problem is that
the file is only going to get bigger and even harder to slurp into memory.
Better to do something that will get us out of trouble.

Likewise reset the file to empty for any other failure within gc_qtexts().
The previous behavior after a write error was to discard query texts but
not do anything to truncate the file, which is just weird.

Also, increase the maximum supported file size from MaxAllocSize to
MaxAllocHugeSize; this makes it more likely we'll be able to do a garbage
collection successfully.

Also, fix recalculation of mean_query_len within entry_dealloc() to match
the calculation in gc_qtexts().  The previous coding overlooked the
possibility of dropped texts (query_len == -1) and would underestimate the
mean of the remaining entries in such cases, thus possibly causing excess
garbage collection cycles.

In passing, add some errdetail to the log entry that complains about
insufficient memory to read the query texts file, which after all was
Jim Nasby's original complaint.

Back-patch to 9.4 where the current handling of query texts was
introduced.

Peter Geoghegan, rather editorialized upon by me
2015-10-04 17:58:30 -04:00
Andres Freund
99557984bc Improve errhint() about replication slot naming restrictions.
The existing hint talked about "may only contain letters", but the
actual requirement is more strict: only lower case letters are allowed.

Reported-By: Rushabh Lathia
Author: Rushabh Lathia
Discussion: AGPqQf2x50qcwbYOBKzb4x75sO_V3g81ZsA8+Ji9iN5t_khFhQ@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: 9.4-, where replication slots were added
2015-10-03 15:29:28 +02:00
Tom Lane
0da864c53c Improve handling of collations in contrib/postgres_fdw.
If we have a local Var of say varchar type with default collation, and
we apply a RelabelType to convert that to text with default collation, we
don't want to consider that as creating an FDW_COLLATE_UNSAFE situation.
It should be okay to compare that to a remote Var, so long as the remote
Var determines the comparison collation.  (When we actually ship such an
expression to the remote side, the local Var would become a Param with
default collation, meaning the remote Var would in fact control the
comparison collation, because non-default implicit collation overrides
default implicit collation in parse_collate.c.)  To fix, be more precise
about what FDW_COLLATE_NONE means: it applies either to a noncollatable
data type or to a collatable type with default collation, if that collation
can't be traced to a remote Var.  (When it can, FDW_COLLATE_SAFE is
appropriate.)  We were essentially using that interpretation already at
the Var/Const/Param level, but we weren't bubbling it up properly.

An alternative fix would be to introduce a separate FDW_COLLATE_DEFAULT
value to describe the second situation, but that would add more code
without changing the actual behavior, so it didn't seem worthwhile.

Also, since we're clarifying the rule to be that we care about whether
operator/function input collations match, there seems no need to fail
immediately upon seeing a Const/Param/non-foreign-Var with nondefault
collation.  We only have to reject if it appears in a collation-sensitive
context (for example, "var IS NOT NULL" is perfectly safe from a collation
standpoint, whatever collation the var has).  So just set the state to
UNSAFE rather than failing immediately.

Per report from Jeevan Chalke.  This essentially corrects some sloppy
thinking in commit ed3ddf918b, so back-patch
to 9.3 where that logic appeared.
2015-09-24 12:47:30 -04:00
Andres Freund
a3e58e79a9 test_decoding: Protect against rare spurious test failures.
A bunch of tests missed specifying that empty transactions shouldn't be
displayed. That causes problems when e.g. autovacuum runs in an
unfortunate moment. The tests in question only run for a very short
time, making this quite unlikely.

Reported-By: Buildfarm member axolotl
Backpatch: 9.4, where logical decoding was introduced
2015-09-22 15:47:53 +02:00
Andrew Dunstan
5ed2d2cba8 Honour TEMP_CONFIG when testing pg_upgrade
This setting contains extra configuration for the temp instance, as used
in pg_regress' --temp-config flag.

Backpatch to 9.2 where test.sh was introduced.
2015-09-17 12:04:16 -04:00
Bruce Momjian
35d2fc1f29 pg_dump, pg_upgrade: allow postgres/template1 tablespace moves
Modify pg_dump to restore postgres/template1 databases to non-default
tablespaces by switching out of the database to be moved, then switching
back.

Also, to fix potentially cases where the old/new tablespaces might not
match, fix pg_upgrade to process new/old tablespaces separately in all
cases.

Report by Marti Raudsepp

Patch by Marti Raudsepp, me

Backpatch through 9.0
2015-09-11 15:51:11 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
ac711dd27f Fix error message wording in previous sslinfo commit 2015-09-08 11:10:20 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
8582cf1eb4 Add more sanity checks in contrib/sslinfo
We were missing a few return checks on OpenSSL calls.  Should be pretty
harmless, since we haven't seen any user reports about problems, and
this is not a high-traffic module anyway; still, a bug is a bug, so
backpatch this all the way back to 9.0.

Author: Michael Paquier, while reviewing another sslinfo patch
2015-09-07 19:18:29 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas
29602295ba Fix misc typos.
Oskari Saarenmaa. Backpatch to stable branches where applicable.
2015-09-05 11:36:24 +03:00
Joe Conway
12da677179 Fix sepgsql regression tests.
The regression tests for sepgsql were broken by changes in the
base distro as-shipped policies. Specifically, definition of
unconfined_t in the system default policy was changed to bypass
multi-category rules, which the regression test depended on.
Fix that by defining a custom privileged domain
(sepgsql_regtest_superuser_t) and using it instead of system's
unconfined_t domain. The new sepgsql_regtest_superuser_t domain
performs almost like the current unconfined_t, but restricted by
multi-category policy as the traditional unconfined_t was.

The custom policy module is a self defined domain, and so should not
be affected by related future system policy changes. However, it still
uses the unconfined_u:unconfined_r pair for selinux-user and role.
Those definitions have not been changed for several years and seem
less risky to rely on than the unconfined_t domain. Additionally, if
we define custom user/role, they would need to be manually defined
at the operating system level, adding more complexity to an already
non-standard and complex regression test.

Back-patch to 9.3. The regression tests will need more work before
working correctly on 9.2. Starting with 9.2, sepgsql has had dependencies
on libselinux versions that are only available on newer distros with
the changed set of policies (e.g. RHEL 7.x). On 9.1 sepgsql works
fine with the older distros with original policy set (e.g. RHEL 6.x),
and on which the existing regression tests work fine. We might want
eventually change 9.1 sepgsql regression tests to be more independent
from the underlying OS policies, however more work will be needed to
make that happen and it is not clear that it is worth the effort.

Kohei KaiGai with review by Adam Brightwell and me, commentary by
Stephen, Alvaro, Tom, Robert, and others.
2015-08-30 11:09:31 -07:00
Tom Lane
4424356c03 contrib/isn now needs a .gitignore file.
Oversight in commit cb3384a0cb.
Back-patch to 9.1, like that commit.
2015-08-02 23:57:47 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
d7d4bd2c3b Fix output of ISBN-13 numbers beginning with 979.
An EAN beginning with 979 (but not 9790 - those are ISMN's) are accepted
as ISBN numbers, but they cannot be represented in the old, 10-digit ISBN
format. They must be output in the new 13-digit ISBN-13 format. We printed
out an incorrect value for those.

Also add a regression test, to test this and some other basic functionality
of the module.

Patch by Fabien Coelho. This fixes bug #13442, reported by B.Z. Backpatch
to 9.1, where we started to recognize ISBN-13 numbers.
2015-08-02 22:12:41 +03:00
Noah Misch
42b6922f31 Replace use of "diff -q".
POSIX does not specify the -q option, and many implementations do not
offer it.  Don't bother changing the MSVC build system, because having
non-GNU diff on Windows is vanishingly unlikely.  Back-patch to 9.2,
where this invocation was introduced.
2015-07-08 20:44:26 -04:00
Tom Lane
58c58d1a9f Fix portability issue in pg_upgrade test script: avoid $PWD.
SUSv2-era shells don't set the PWD variable, though anything more modern
does.  In the buildfarm environment this could lead to test.sh executing
with PWD pointing to $HOME or another high-level directory, so that there
were conflicts between concurrent executions of the test in different
branch subdirectories.  This appears to be the explanation for recent
intermittent failures on buildfarm members binturong and dingo (and might
well have something to do with the buildfarm script's failure to capture
log files from pg_upgrade tests, too).

To fix, just use `pwd` in place of $PWD.  AFAICS test.sh is the only place
in our source tree that depended on $PWD.  Back-patch to all versions
containing this script.

Per buildfarm.  Thanks to Oskari Saarenmaa for diagnosing the problem.
2015-07-07 12:49:18 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
9d6352aaae Fix pgbench progress report behaviour when pgbench or a query gets stuck.
There were two issues here. First, if a query got stuck so that it took
e.g. 5 seconds, and progress interval was 1 second, no progress reports were
printed until the query returned. Fix so that we wake up specifically to
print the progress report. Secondly, if pgbench got stuck so that it would
nevertheless not print a progress report on time, and enough time passes
that it's already time to print the next progress report, just skip the one
that was missed. Before this patch, it would print the missed one with 0 TPS
immediately after the previous one.

Fabien Coelho. Backpatch to 9.4, where progress reports were added.
2015-07-03 11:15:27 +03:00
Tatsuo Ishii
9a43799440 Fix function declaration style to respect the coding standard. 2015-06-28 19:04:39 +09:00
Andres Freund
ed6c8d7361 Fix test_decoding's handling of nonexistant columns in old tuple versions.
test_decoding used fastgetattr() to extract column values. That's wrong
when decoding updates and deletes if a table's replica identity is set
to FULL and new columns have been added since the old version of the
tuple was created. Due to the lack of a crosscheck with the datum's
natts values an invalid value will be output, leading to errors or
worse.

Bug: #13470
Reported-By: Krzysztof Kotlarski
Discussion: 20150626100333.3874.90852@wrigleys.postgresql.org

Backpatch to 9.4, where the feature, including the bug, was added.
2015-06-27 19:01:00 +02:00
Noah Misch
fba1fb4efb pgcrypto: Report errant decryption as "Wrong key or corrupt data".
This has been the predominant outcome.  When the output of decrypting
with a wrong key coincidentally resembled an OpenPGP packet header,
pgcrypto could instead report "Corrupt data", "Not text data" or
"Unsupported compression algorithm".  The distinct "Corrupt data"
message added no value.  The latter two error messages misled when the
decrypted payload also exhibited fundamental integrity problems.  Worse,
error message variance in other systems has enabled cryptologic attacks;
see RFC 4880 section "14. Security Considerations".  Whether these
pgcrypto behaviors are likewise exploitable is unknown.

In passing, document that pgcrypto does not resist side-channel attacks.
Back-patch to 9.0 (all supported versions).

Security: CVE-2015-3167
2015-05-18 10:02:35 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
367b34a22c Fix typos 2015-05-17 22:21:36 -04:00
Bruce Momjian
5f65396359 pg_upgrade: properly handle timeline variables
There is no behavior change here as we now always set the timeline to
one.

Report by Tom Lane

Backpatch to 9.3 and 9.4
2015-05-16 15:16:28 -04:00
Bruce Momjian
387a3e46cf pg_upgrade: force timeline 1 in the new cluster
Previously, this prevented promoted standby servers from being upgraded
because of a missing WAL history file.  (Timeline 1 doesn't need a
history file, and we don't copy WAL files anyway.)

Report by Christian Echerer(?), Alexey Klyukin

Backpatch through 9.0
2015-05-16 00:40:18 -04:00
Bruce Momjian
31f5d3f354 pg_upgrade: only allow template0 to be non-connectable
This patch causes pg_upgrade to error out during its check phase if:

(1) template0 is marked connectable
or
(2) any other database is marked non-connectable

This is done because, in the first case, pg_upgrade would fail because
the pg_dumpall --globals restore would fail, and in the second case, the
database would not be restored, leading to data loss.

Report by Matt Landry (1), Stephen Frost (2)

Backpatch through 9.0
2015-05-16 00:10:03 -04:00
Tom Lane
b1ec45994e Fix incorrect declaration of citext's regexp_matches() functions.
These functions should return SETOF TEXT[], like the core functions they
are wrappers for; but they were incorrectly declared as returning just
TEXT[].  This mistake had two results: first, if there was no match you got
a scalar null result, whereas what you should get is an empty set (zero
rows).  Second, the 'g' flag was effectively ignored, since you would get
only one result array even if there were multiple matches, as reported by
Jeff Certain.

While ignoring 'g' is a clear bug, the behavior for no matches might well
have been thought to be the intended behavior by people who hadn't compared
it carefully to the core regexp_matches() functions.  So we should tread
carefully about introducing this change in the back branches.  Still, it
clearly is a bug and so providing some fix is desirable.

After discussion, the conclusion was to introduce the change in a 1.1
version of the citext extension (as we would need to do anyway); 1.0 still
contains the incorrect behavior.  1.1 is the default and only available
version in HEAD, but it is optional in the back branches, where 1.0 remains
the default version.  People wishing to adopt the fix in back branches will
need to explicitly do ALTER EXTENSION citext UPDATE TO '1.1'.  (I also
provided a downgrade script in the back branches, so people could go back
to 1.0 if necessary.)

This should be called out as an incompatible change in the 9.5 release
notes, although we'll also document it in the next set of back-branch
release notes.  The notes should mention that any views or rules that use
citext's regexp_matches() functions will need to be dropped before
upgrading to 1.1, and then recreated again afterwards.

Back-patch to 9.1.  The bug goes all the way back to citext's introduction
in 8.4, but pre-9.1 there is no extension mechanism with which to manage
the change.  Given the lack of previous complaints it seems unnecessary to
change this behavior in 9.0, anyway.
2015-05-05 15:50:53 -04:00
Tom Lane
f97a0a2cc4 Fix assorted inconsistent function declarations.
While gcc doesn't complain if you declare a function "static" and then
define it not-static, other compilers do; and in any case the code is
highly misleading this way.  Add the missing "static" keywords to a
couple of recent patches.  Per buildfarm member pademelon.
2015-04-07 16:56:21 -04:00