1
0
mirror of https://github.com/postgres/postgres.git synced 2025-05-26 18:17:33 +03:00

34521 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Michael Meskes
3a024c1104 Fix handling of array of char pointers in ecpglib.
When array of char * was used as target for a FETCH statement returning more
than one row, it tried to store all the result in the first element. Instead it
should dump array of char pointers with right offset, use the address instead
of the value of the C variable while reading the array and treat such variable
as char **, instead of char * for pointer arithmetic.

Patch by Ashutosh Bapat <ashutosh.bapat@enterprisedb.com>
2014-05-06 13:14:01 +02:00
Tom Lane
c8fbeeb45e Fix possible cache invalidation failure in ReceiveSharedInvalidMessages.
Commit fad153ec45299bd4d4f29dec8d9e04e2f1c08148 modified sinval.c to reduce
the number of calls into sinvaladt.c (which require taking a shared lock)
by keeping a local buffer of collected-but-not-yet-processed messages.
However, if processing of the last message in a batch resulted in a
recursive call to ReceiveSharedInvalidMessages, we could overwrite that
message with a new one while the outer invalidation function was still
working on it.  This would be likely to lead to invalidation of the wrong
cache entry, allowing subsequent processing to use stale cache data.
The fix is just to make a local copy of each message while we're processing
it.

Spotted by Andres Freund.  Back-patch to 8.4 where the bug was introduced.
2014-05-05 14:43:46 -04:00
Tom Lane
5788052f3c Fix "quiet inline" configure test for newer clang compilers.
This test used to just define an unused static inline function and check
whether that causes a warning.  But newer clang versions warn about
unused static inline functions when defined inside a .c file, but not
when defined in an included header, which is the case we care about.
Change the test to cope.

Andres Freund
2014-05-02 15:30:35 -04:00
Tom Lane
8c43980a18 Fix failure to detoast fields in composite elements of structured types.
If we have an array of records stored on disk, the individual record fields
cannot contain out-of-line TOAST pointers: the tuptoaster.c mechanisms are
only prepared to deal with TOAST pointers appearing in top-level fields of
a stored row.  The same applies for ranges over composite types, nested
composites, etc.  However, the existing code only took care of expanding
sub-field TOAST pointers for the case of nested composites, not for other
structured types containing composites.  For example, given a command such
as

UPDATE tab SET arraycol = ARRAY[(ROW(x,42)::mycompositetype] ...

where x is a direct reference to a field of an on-disk tuple, if that field
is long enough to be toasted out-of-line then the TOAST pointer would be
inserted as-is into the array column.  If the source record for x is later
deleted, the array field value would become a dangling pointer, leading
to errors along the line of "missing chunk number 0 for toast value ..."
when the value is referenced.  A reproducible test case for this was
provided by Jan Pecek, but it seems likely that some of the "missing chunk
number" reports we've heard in the past were caused by similar issues.

Code-wise, the problem is that PG_DETOAST_DATUM() is not adequate to
produce a self-contained Datum value if the Datum is of composite type.
Seen in this light, the problem is not just confined to arrays and ranges,
but could also affect some other places where detoasting is done in that
way, for example form_index_tuple().

I tried teaching the array code to apply toast_flatten_tuple_attribute()
along with PG_DETOAST_DATUM() when the array element type is composite,
but this was messy and imposed extra cache lookup costs whether or not any
TOAST pointers were present, indeed sometimes when the array element type
isn't even composite (since sometimes it takes a typcache lookup to find
that out).  The idea of extending that approach to all the places that
currently use PG_DETOAST_DATUM() wasn't attractive at all.

This patch instead solves the problem by decreeing that composite Datum
values must not contain any out-of-line TOAST pointers in the first place;
that is, we expand out-of-line fields at the point of constructing a
composite Datum, not at the point where we're about to insert it into a
larger tuple.  This rule is applied only to true composite Datums, not
to tuples that are being passed around the system as tuples, so it's not
as invasive as it might sound at first.  With this approach, the amount
of code that has to be touched for a full solution is greatly reduced,
and added cache lookup costs are avoided except when there actually is
a TOAST pointer that needs to be inlined.

The main drawback of this approach is that we might sometimes dereference
a TOAST pointer that will never actually be used by the query, imposing a
rather large cost that wasn't there before.  On the other side of the coin,
if the field value is used multiple times then we'll come out ahead by
avoiding repeat detoastings.  Experimentation suggests that common SQL
coding patterns are unaffected either way, though.  Applications that are
very negatively affected could be advised to modify their code to not fetch
columns they won't be using.

In future, we might consider reverting this solution in favor of detoasting
only at the point where data is about to be stored to disk, using some
method that can drill down into multiple levels of nested structured types.
That will require defining new APIs for structured types, though, so it
doesn't seem feasible as a back-patchable fix.

Note that this patch changes HeapTupleGetDatum() from a macro to a function
call; this means that any third-party code using that macro will not get
protection against creating TOAST-pointer-containing Datums until it's
recompiled.  The same applies to any uses of PG_RETURN_HEAPTUPLEHEADER().
It seems likely that this is not a big problem in practice: most of the
tuple-returning functions in core and contrib produce outputs that could
not possibly be toasted anyway, and the same probably holds for third-party
extensions.

This bug has existed since TOAST was invented, so back-patch to all
supported branches.
2014-05-01 15:19:14 -04:00
Tom Lane
920fbc1b43 Check for interrupts and stack overflow during rule/view dumps.
Since ruleutils.c recurses, it could be driven to stack overflow by
deeply nested constructs.  Very large queries might also take long
enough to deparse that a check for interrupts seems like a good idea.
Stick appropriate tests into a couple of key places.

Noted by Greg Stark.  Back-patch to all supported branches.
2014-04-30 13:46:19 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
e2558e016e Add missing SYSTEMQUOTEs
Some popen() calls were missing SYSTEMQUOTEs, which caused initdb and
pg_upgrade to fail on Windows, if the installation path contained both
spaces and @ signs.

Patch by Nikhil Deshpande. Backpatch to all supported versions.
2014-04-30 10:36:31 +03:00
Tom Lane
0901dbab33 Improve planner to drop constant-NULL inputs of AND/OR where it's legal.
In general we can't discard constant-NULL inputs, since they could change
the result of the AND/OR to be NULL.  But at top level of WHERE, we do not
need to distinguish a NULL result from a FALSE result, so it's okay to
treat NULL as FALSE and then simplify AND/OR accordingly.

This is a very ancient oversight, but in 9.2 and later it can lead to
failure to optimize queries that previous releases did optimize, as a
result of more aggressive parameter substitution rules making it possible
to reduce more subexpressions to NULL constants.  This is the root cause of
bug #10171 from Arnold Scheffler.  We could alternatively have fixed that
by teaching orclauses.c to ignore constant-NULL OR arms, but it seems
better to get rid of them globally.

I resisted the temptation to back-patch this change into all active
branches, but it seems appropriate to back-patch as far as 9.2 so that
there will not be performance regressions of the kind shown in this bug.
2014-04-29 13:12:33 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
1e96eff43a Fix two bugs in WAL-logging of GIN pending-list pages.
In writeListPage, never take a full-page image of the page, because we
have all the information required to re-initialize in the WAL record
anyway. Before this fix, a full-page image was always generated, unless
full_page_writes=off, because when the page is initialized its LSN is
always 0. In stable-branches, keep the code to restore the backup blocks
if they exist, in case that the WAL is generated with an older minor
version, but in master Assert that there are no full-page images.

In the redo routine, add missing "off++". Otherwise the tuples are added
to the page in reverse order. That happens to be harmless because we
always scan and remove all the tuples together, but it was clearly wrong.
Also, it was masked by the first bug unless full_page_writes=off, because
the page was always restored from a full-page image.

Backpatch to all supported versions.
2014-04-28 17:31:07 +03:00
Tom Lane
ea9ac77419 Reset pg_stat_activity.xact_start during PREPARE TRANSACTION.
Once we've completed a PREPARE, our session is not running a transaction,
so its entry in pg_stat_activity should show xact_start as null, rather
than leaving the value as the start time of the now-prepared transaction.

I think possibly this oversight was triggered by faulty extrapolation
from the adjacent comment that says PrepareTransaction should not call
AtEOXact_PgStat, so tweak the wording of that comment.

Noted by Andres Freund while considering bug #10123 from Maxim Boguk,
although this error doesn't seem to explain that report.

Back-patch to all active branches.
2014-04-24 13:30:00 -04:00
Tom Lane
f9cd2b7824 Fix incorrect pg_proc.proallargtypes entries for two built-in functions.
pg_sequence_parameters() and pg_identify_object() have had incorrect
proallargtypes entries since 9.1 and 9.3 respectively.  This was mostly
masked by the correct information in proargtypes, but a few operations
such as pg_get_function_arguments() (and thus psql's \df display) would
show the wrong data types for these functions' input parameters.

In HEAD, fix the wrong info, bump catversion, and add an opr_sanity
regression test to catch future mistakes of this sort.

In the back branches, just fix the wrong info so that installations
initdb'd with future minor releases will have the right data.  We
can't force an initdb, and it doesn't seem like a good idea to add
a regression test that will fail on existing installations.

Andres Freund
2014-04-23 21:21:12 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
6c5cba8e0b Fix typos in comment. 2014-04-23 12:58:18 +03:00
Tom Lane
b4eb2d5cc0 pg_stat_statements forgot to let previous occupant of hook get control too.
pgss_post_parse_analyze() neglected to pass the call on to any earlier
occupant of the post_parse_analyze_hook.  There are no other users of that
hook in contrib/, and most likely none in the wild either, so this is
probably just a latent bug.  But it's a bug nonetheless, so back-patch
to 9.2 where this code was introduced.
2014-04-21 13:28:13 -04:00
Tom Lane
c6b55bec3f Fix unused-variable warning on Windows.
Introduced in 585bca39: msgid is not used in the Windows code path.

Also adjust comments a tad (mostly to keep pgindent from messing it up).

David Rowley
2014-04-17 16:12:38 -04:00
Bruce Momjian
ea8725a8b3 pgcrypto: fix memset() calls that might be optimized away
Specifically, on-stack memset() might be removed, so:

	* Replace memset() with px_memset()
	* Add px_memset to copy_crlf()
	* Add px_memset to pgp-s2k.c

Patch by Marko Kreen

Report by PVS-Studio

Backpatch through 8.4.
2014-04-17 12:37:53 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan
d3c7498042 Attempt to get plpython regression tests working again for MSVC builds.
This has probably been broken for quite a long time. Buildfarm member
currawong's current results suggest that it's been broken since 9.1, so
backpatch this to that branch.

This only supports Python 2 - I will handle Python 3 separately, but
this is a fairly simple fix.
2014-04-16 13:44:34 -04:00
Tom Lane
bac05d622d Use AF_UNSPEC not PF_UNSPEC in getaddrinfo calls.
According to the Single Unix Spec and assorted man pages, you're supposed
to use the constants named AF_xxx when setting ai_family for a getaddrinfo
call.  In a few places we were using PF_xxx instead.  Use of PF_xxx
appears to be an ancient BSD convention that was not adopted by later
standardization.  On BSD and most later Unixen, it doesn't matter much
because those constants have equivalent values anyway; but nonetheless
this code is not per spec.

In the same vein, replace PF_INET by AF_INET in one socket() call, which
wasn't even consistent with the other socket() call in the same function
let alone the remainder of our code.

Per investigation of a Cygwin trouble report from Marco Atzeri.  It's
probably a long shot that this will fix his issue, but it's wrong in
any case.
2014-04-16 13:21:31 -04:00
Magnus Hagander
b764080eed Fix timeout in LDAP lookup of libpq connection parameters
Bind attempts to an LDAP server should time out after two seconds,
allowing additional lines in the service control file to be parsed
(which provide a fall back to a secondary LDAP server or default options).
The existing code failed to enforce that timeout during TCP connect,
resulting in a hang far longer than two seconds if the LDAP server
does not respond.

Laurenz Albe
2014-04-16 18:59:11 +02:00
Bruce Momjian
966f015b60 check socket creation errors against PGINVALID_SOCKET
Previously, in some places, socket creation errors were checked for
negative values, which is not true for Windows because sockets are
unsigned.  This masked socket creation errors on Windows.

Backpatch through 9.0.  8.4 doesn't have the infrastructure to fix this.
2014-04-16 10:45:48 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
a4c4e0bf60 Use correctly-sized buffer when zero-filling a WAL file.
I mixed up BLCKSZ and XLOG_BLCKSZ when I changed the way the buffer is
allocated a couple of weeks ago. With the default settings, they are both
8k, but they can be changed at compile-time.
2014-04-16 10:26:54 +03:00
Michael Meskes
2b3136de9e Several fixes to array handling in ecpg.
Patches by Ashutosh Bapat <ashutosh.bapat@enterprisedb.com>
2014-04-09 11:43:13 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas
02b9fd73ee Fix hot standby bug with GiST scans.
Don't reset the rightlink of a page when replaying a page update record.
This was a leftover from pre-hot standby days, when it was not possible to
have scans concurrent with WAL replay. Resetting the right-link was not
necessary back then either, but it was done for the sake of tidiness. But
with hot standby, it's wrong, because a concurrent scan might still need it.

Backpatch all versions with hot standby, 9.0 and above.
2014-04-08 14:51:56 +03:00
Robert Haas
74cf802841 Assert that strong-lock count is >0 everywhere it's decremented.
The one existing assertion of this type has tripped a few times in the
buildfarm lately, but it's not clear whether the problem is really
originating there or whether it's leftovers from a trip through one
of the other two paths that lack a matching assertion.  So add one.

Since the same bug(s) most likely exist(s) in the back-branches also,
back-patch to 9.2, where the fast-path lock mechanism was added.
2014-04-07 11:15:13 -04:00
Tom Lane
53463e2479 Block signals earlier during postmaster startup.
Formerly, we set up the postmaster's signal handling only when we were
about to start launching subprocesses.  This is a bad idea though, as
it means that for example a SIGINT arriving before that will kill the
postmaster instantly, perhaps leaving lockfiles, socket files, shared
memory, etc laying about.  We'd rather that such a signal caused orderly
postmaster termination including releasing of those resources.  A simple
fix is to move the PostmasterMain stanza that initializes signal handling
to an earlier point, before we've created any such resources.  Then, an
early-arriving signal will be blocked until we're ready to deal with it
in the usual way.  (The only part that really needs to be moved up is
blocking of signals, but it seems best to keep the signal handler
installation calls together with that; for one thing this ensures the
kernel won't drop any signals we wished to get.  The handlers won't get
invoked in any case until we unblock signals in ServerLoop.)

Per a report from MauMau.  He proposed changing the way "pg_ctl stop"
works to deal with this, but that'd just be masking one symptom not
fixing the core issue.

It's been like this since forever, so back-patch to all supported branches.
2014-04-05 18:16:14 -04:00
Tom Lane
bdc3e95c2a Fix processing of PGC_BACKEND GUC parameters on Windows.
EXEC_BACKEND builds (i.e., Windows) failed to absorb values of PGC_BACKEND
parameters if they'd been changed post-startup via the config file.  This
for example prevented log_connections from working if it were turned on
post-startup.  The mechanism for handling this case has always been a bit
of a kluge, and it wasn't revisited when we implemented EXEC_BACKEND.
While in a normal forking environment new backends will inherit the
postmaster's value of such settings, EXEC_BACKEND backends have to read
the settings from the CONFIG_EXEC_PARAMS file, and they were mistakenly
rejecting them.  So this case has always been broken in the Windows port;
so back-patch to all supported branches.

Amit Kapila
2014-04-05 12:41:31 -04:00
Tom Lane
1a496a12b3 Fix tablespace creation WAL replay to work on Windows.
The code segment that removes the old symlink (if present) wasn't clued
into the fact that on Windows, symlinks are junction points which have
to be removed with rmdir().

Backpatch to 9.0, where the failing code was introduced.

MauMau, reviewed by Muhammad Asif Naeem and Amit Kapila
2014-04-04 23:09:41 -04:00
Tom Lane
6d25eb314a Allow "-C variable" and "--describe-config" even to root users.
There's no really compelling reason to refuse to do these read-only,
non-server-starting options as root, and there's at least one good
reason to allow -C: pg_ctl uses -C to find out the true data directory
location when pointed at a config-only directory.  On Windows, this is
done before dropping administrator privileges, which means that pg_ctl
fails for administrators if and only if a config-only layout is used.

Since the root-privilege check is done so early in startup, it's a bit
awkward to check for these switches.  Make the somewhat arbitrary
decision that we'll only skip the root check if -C is the first switch.
This is not just to make the code a bit simpler: it also guarantees that
we can't misinterpret a --boot mode switch.  (While AuxiliaryProcessMain
doesn't currently recognize any such switch, it might have one in the
future.)  This is no particular problem for pg_ctl, and since the whole
behavior is undocumented anyhow, it's not a documentation issue either.
(--describe-config only works as the first switch anyway, so this is
no restriction for that case either.)

Back-patch to 9.2 where pg_ctl first began to use -C.

MauMau, heavily edited by me
2014-04-04 22:03:42 -04:00
Tom Lane
ed1cb42415 Fix bogus time printout in walreceiver's debug log messages.
The displayed sendtime and receipttime were always exactly equal, because
somebody forgot that timestamptz_to_str returns a static buffer (thereby
simplifying life for most callers, at the cost of complicating it for those
who need two results concurrently).  Apply the same pstrdup solution used
by the other call sites with this issue.  Back-patch to 9.2 where the
faulty code was introduced.  Per bug #9849 from Haruka Takatsuka, though
this is not exactly his patch.

Possibly we should change timestamptz_to_str's API, but I wouldn't want
to do so in the back branches.
2014-04-04 11:43:41 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
7d1e0e8d7a Avoid allocations in critical sections.
If a palloc in a critical section fails, it becomes a PANIC.
2014-04-04 13:22:45 +03:00
Tom Lane
6c1cfbacb9 Fix documentation about joining pg_locks to other views.
The advice to join to pg_prepared_xacts via the transaction column was not
updated when the transaction column was replaced by virtualtransaction.
Since it's not quite obvious how to do that join, give an explicit example.
For consistency also give an example for the adjacent case of joining to
pg_stat_activity.  And link-ify the view references too, just because we
can.  Per bug #9840 from Alexey Bashtanov.

Michael Paquier and Tom Lane
2014-04-03 14:18:31 -04:00
Tom Lane
4f30487535 Fix documentation about size of interval type.
It's been 16 bytes, not 12, for ages.  This was fixed in passing in HEAD
(commit 146604ec), but as a factual error it should have been back-patched.
Per gripe from Tatsuhito Kasahara.
2014-04-03 11:06:17 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
003a31a7c9 Avoid palloc in critical section in GiST WAL-logging.
Memory allocation can fail if you run out of memory, and inside a critical
section that will lead to a PANIC. Use conservatively-sized arrays in stack
instead.

There was previously no explicit limit on the number of pages a GiST split
can produce, it was only limited by the number of LWLocks that can be held
simultaneously (100 at the moment). This patch adds an explicit limit of 75
pages. That should be plenty, a typical split shouldn't produce more than
2-3 page halves.

The bug has been there forever, but only backpatch down to 9.1. The code
was changed significantly in 9.1, and it doesn't seem worth the risk or
trouble to adapt this for 9.0 and 8.4.
2014-04-03 15:44:09 +03:00
Tom Lane
029decfec6 Fix assorted issues in client host name lookup.
The code for matching clients to pg_hba.conf lines that specify host names
(instead of IP address ranges) failed to complain if reverse DNS lookup
failed; instead it silently didn't match, so that you might end up getting
a surprising "no pg_hba.conf entry for ..." error, as seen in bug #9518
from Mike Blackwell.  Since we don't want to make this a fatal error in
situations where pg_hba.conf contains a mixture of host names and IP
addresses (clients matching one of the numeric entries should not have to
have rDNS data), remember the lookup failure and mention it as DETAIL if
we get to "no pg_hba.conf entry".  Apply the same approach to forward-DNS
lookup failures, too, rather than treating them as immediate hard errors.

Along the way, fix a couple of bugs that prevented us from detecting an
rDNS lookup error reliably, and make sure that we make only one rDNS lookup
attempt; formerly, if the lookup attempt failed, the code would try again
for each host name entry in pg_hba.conf.  Since more or less the whole
point of this design is to ensure there's only one lookup attempt not one
per entry, the latter point represents a performance bug that seems
sufficient justification for back-patching.

Also, adjust src/port/getaddrinfo.c so that it plays as well as it can
with this code.  Which is not all that well, since it does not have actual
support for rDNS lookup, but at least it should return the expected (and
required by spec) error codes so that the main code correctly perceives the
lack of functionality as a lookup failure.  It's unlikely that PG is still
being used in production on any machines that require our getaddrinfo.c,
so I'm not excited about working harder than this.

To keep the code in the various branches similar, this includes
back-patching commits c424d0d1052cb4053c8712ac44123f9b9a9aa3f2 and
1997f34db4687e671690ed054c8f30bb501b1168 into 9.2 and earlier.

Back-patch to 9.1 where the facility for hostnames in pg_hba.conf was
introduced.
2014-04-02 17:11:31 -04:00
Tom Lane
e83bee8ddc Fix bugs in manipulation of PgBackendStatus.st_clienthostname.
Initialization of this field was not being done according to the
st_changecount protocol (it has to be done within the changecount increment
range, not outside).  And the test to see if the value should be reported
as null was wrong.  Noted while perusing uses of Port.remote_hostname.

This was wrong from the introduction of this code (commit 4a25bc145),
so back-patch to 9.1.
2014-04-01 21:30:14 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
7ef17dd71d Fix typo in comment.
Amit Langote
2014-04-01 09:29:37 +03:00
Robert Haas
e980ec7c80 Mark FastPathStrongRelationLocks volatile.
Otherwise, the compiler might decide to move modifications to data
within this structure outside the enclosing SpinLockAcquire /
SpinLockRelease pair, leading to shared memory corruption.

This may or may not explain a recent lmgr-related buildfarm failure
on prairiedog, but it needs to be fixed either way.
2014-03-31 14:38:18 -04:00
Robert Haas
6a63dda4c2 Count buffers dirtied due to hints in pgBufferUsage.shared_blks_dirtied.
Previously, such buffers weren't counted, with the possible result that
EXPLAIN (BUFFERS) and pg_stat_statements would understate the true
number of blocks dirtied by an SQL statement.

Back-patch to 9.2, where this counter was introduced.

Amit Kapila
2014-03-31 13:29:54 -04:00
Noah Misch
8c1797e59b Revert "Secure Unix-domain sockets of "make check" temporary clusters."
About half of the buildfarm members use too-long directory names,
strongly suggesting that this approach is a dead end.
2014-03-29 03:14:48 -04:00
Noah Misch
83d12a99da Secure Unix-domain sockets of "make check" temporary clusters.
Any OS user able to access the socket can connect as the bootstrap
superuser and in turn execute arbitrary code as the OS user running the
test.  Protect against that by placing the socket in the temporary data
directory, which has mode 0700 thanks to initdb.  Back-patch to 8.4 (all
supported versions).  The hazard remains wherever the temporary cluster
accepts TCP connections, notably on Windows.

Attempts to run "make check" from a directory with a long name will now
fail.  An alternative not sharing that problem was to place the socket
in a subdirectory of /tmp, but that is only secure if /tmp is sticky.
The PG_REGRESS_SOCK_DIR environment variable is available as a
workaround when testing from long directory paths.

As a convenient side effect, this lets testing proceed smoothly in
builds that override DEFAULT_PGSOCKET_DIR.  Popular non-default values
like /var/run/postgresql are often unwritable to the build user.

Security: CVE-2014-0067
2014-03-29 01:13:13 -04:00
Noah Misch
c1932ec9e8 Document platform-specificity of unix_socket_permissions.
Back-patch to 8.4 (all supported versions).
2014-03-29 01:02:51 -04:00
Tom Lane
952f0153f3 Revert "Document that Python 2.3 requires cdecimal module for full functionality."
This reverts commit a8ee81822e43120e1b31949b07af1adadcbeffc1.
The change requiring cdecimal is new in 9.4 (see 7919398bac),
so we should not claim previous branches need it.
2014-03-27 17:08:38 -04:00
Tom Lane
a8ee81822e Document that Python 2.3 requires cdecimal module for full functionality.
This has been true for some time, but we were leaving users to discover it
the hard way.

Back-patch to 9.2.  It might've been true before that, but we were claiming
Python 2.2 compatibility before that, so I won't guess at the exact
requirements back then.
2014-03-26 22:43:29 -04:00
Tom Lane
6b3b15e534 Fix refcounting bug in PLy_modify_tuple().
We must increment the refcount on "plntup" as soon as we have the
reference, not sometime later.  Otherwise, if an error is thrown in
between, the Py_XDECREF(plntup) call in the PG_CATCH block removes a
refcount we didn't add, allowing the object to be freed even though
it's still part of the plpython function's parsetree.

This appears to be the cause of crashes seen on buildfarm member
prairiedog.  It's a bit surprising that we've not seen it fail repeatably
before, considering that the regression tests have been exercising the
faulty code path since 2009.

The real-world impact is probably minimal, since it's unlikely anyone would
be provoking the "TD["new"] is not a dictionary" error in production, and
that's the only case that is actually wrong.  Still, it's a bug affecting
the regression tests, so patch all supported branches.

In passing, remove dead variable "plstr", and demote "platt" to a local
variable inside the PG_TRY block, since we don't need to clean it up
in the PG_CATCH path.
2014-03-26 16:41:38 -04:00
Fujii Masao
6fe8411ffb Don't forget to flush XLOG_PARAMETER_CHANGE record.
Backpatch to 9.0 where XLOG_PARAMETER_CHANGE record was instroduced.
2014-03-26 02:14:01 +09:00
Magnus Hagander
b18efb86fd Fix typos in pg_basebackup documentation
Joshua Tolley
2014-03-25 11:17:30 +01:00
Noah Misch
1d1b32a953 Address ccvalid/ccnoinherit in TupleDesc support functions.
equalTupleDescs() neglected both of these ConstrCheck fields, and
CreateTupleDescCopyConstr() neglected ccnoinherit.  At this time, the
only known behavior defect resulting from these omissions is constraint
exclusion disregarding a CHECK constraint validated by an ALTER TABLE
VALIDATE CONSTRAINT statement issued earlier in the same transaction.
Back-patch to 9.2, where these fields were introduced.
2014-03-23 02:15:09 -04:00
Bruce Momjian
ee42d8f10b Properly check for readdir/closedir() failures
Clear errno before calling readdir() and handle old MinGW errno bug
while adding full test coverage for readdir/closedir failures.

Backpatch through 8.4.
2014-03-21 13:45:11 -04:00
Tom Lane
473194c09c Fix memory leak during regular expression execution.
For a regex containing backrefs, pg_regexec() might fail to free all the
sub-DFAs that were created during execution, resulting in a permanent
(session lifespan) memory leak.  Problem was introduced by me in commit
587359479acbbdc95c8e37da40707e37097423f5.  Per report from Sandro Santilli;
diagnosis by Greg Stark.
2014-03-19 11:09:59 -04:00
Tom Lane
f07692e190 Stamp 9.2.8. REL9_2_8 2014-03-17 15:36:46 -04:00
Tom Lane
00e063a232 Release notes for 9.3.4, 9.2.8, 9.1.13, 9.0.17, 8.4.21. 2014-03-17 15:28:29 -04:00
Fujii Masao
7899aa356a Fix bug in clean shutdown of walsender that pg_receiving is connecting to.
On clean shutdown, walsender waits for all WAL to be replicated to a standby,
and exits. It determined whether that replication had been completed by
checking whether its sent location had been equal to a standby's flush
location. Unfortunately this condition never becomes true when the standby
such as pg_receivexlog which always returns an invalid flush location is
connecting to walsender, and then walsender waits forever.

This commit changes walsender so that it just checks a standby's write
location if a flush location is invalid.

Back-patch to 9.1 where enough infrastructure for this exists.
2014-03-17 20:41:52 +09:00