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31184 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
607f889c71 Fix ancient docs/comments thinko: XID comparison is mod 2^32, not 2^31.
Pointed out by Gianni Ciolli.
2013-12-12 12:40:03 -05:00
7d6f5dda55 Tweak placement of explicit ANALYZE commands in the regression tests.
Make the COPY test, which loads most of the large static tables used in
the tests, also explicitly ANALYZE those tables.  This allows us to get
rid of various ad-hoc, and rather redundant, ANALYZE commands that had
gotten stuck into various test scripts over time to ensure we got
consistent plan choices.  (We could have done a database-wide ANALYZE,
but that would cause stats to get attached to the small static tables
too, which results in plan changes compared to the historical behavior.
I'm not sure that's a good idea, so not going that far for now.)

Back-patch to 9.0, since 9.0 and 9.1 are currently sometimes failing
regression tests for lack of an "ANALYZE tenk1" in the subselect test.
There's no need for this in 8.4 since we didn't print any plans back
then.
2013-12-11 15:08:45 -05:00
41e9990cdc Fix possible crash with nested SubLinks.
An expression such as WHERE (... x IN (SELECT ...) ...) IN (SELECT ...)
could produce an invalid plan that results in a crash at execution time,
if the planner attempts to flatten the outer IN into a semi-join.
This happens because convert_testexpr() was not expecting any nested
SubLinks and would wrongly replace any PARAM_SUBLINK Params belonging
to the inner SubLink.  (I think the comment denying that this case could
happen was wrong when written; it's certainly been wrong for quite a long
time, since very early versions of the semijoin flattening logic.)

Per report from Teodor Sigaev.  Back-patch to all supported branches.
2013-12-10 16:10:31 -05:00
9057adc232 Fix performance regression in dblink connection speed.
Previous commit e5de601267 modified dblink
to ensure client encoding matched the server. However the added
PQsetClientEncoding() call added significant overhead. Restore original
performance in the common case where client encoding already matches
server encoding by doing nothing in that case. Applies to all active
branches.

Issue reported and work sponsored by Zonar Systems.
2013-12-07 16:58:41 -08:00
36352ceb40 Clear retry flags properly in replacement OpenSSL sock_write function.
Current OpenSSL code includes a BIO_clear_retry_flags() step in the
sock_write() function.  Either we failed to copy the code correctly, or
they added this since we copied it.  In any case, lack of the clear step
appears to be the cause of the server lockup after connection loss reported
in bug #8647 from Valentine Gogichashvili.  Assume that this is correct
coding for all OpenSSL versions, and hence back-patch to all supported
branches.

Diagnosis and patch by Alexander Kukushkin.
2013-12-05 12:48:41 -05:00
760606dc58 Fix full-page writes of internal GIN pages.
Insertion to a non-leaf GIN page didn't make a full-page image of the page,
which is wrong. The code used to do it correctly, but was changed (commit
853d1c3103) because the redo-routine didn't
track incomplete splits correctly when the page was restored from a full
page image. Of course, that was not right way to fix it, the redo routine
should've been fixed instead. The redo-routine was surreptitiously fixed
in 2010 (commit 4016bdef8a), so all we need
to do now is revert the code that creates the record to its original form.

This doesn't change the format of the WAL record.

Backpatch to all supported versions.
2013-12-03 23:01:31 +02:00
ad670a5d73 Stamp 9.0.15. REL9_0_15 2013-12-02 16:04:20 -05:00
81fb8ff617 Update release notes for 9.3.2, 9.2.6, 9.1.11, 9.0.15, 8.4.19. 2013-12-02 15:54:08 -05:00
3d974e303d Fix incomplete backpatch of pg_multixact truncation changes to <= 9.2
The backpatch of a95335b544d9c8377e9dc7a399d8e9a155895f82 to 9.2, 9.1
and 9.0 was incomplete, missing changes to xlog.c, primarily the call
to TrimMultiXact(). Testing presumably didn't show a problem without
these changes because TrimMultiXact() performs defense-in-depth work,
which is not strictly necessary.

It also missed moving StartupMultiXact() which would have been
problematic if a restartpoing happened in exactly the wrong moment,
causing a transient error.

Andres Freund
2013-12-02 13:28:10 -03:00
8269e4091c Translation updates 2013-12-02 00:05:18 -05:00
47430452ab Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2013h.
DST law changes in Argentina, Brazil, Jordan, Libya, Liechtenstein,
Morocco, Palestine.  New timezone abbreviations WIB, WIT, WITA for
Indonesia.
2013-12-01 14:12:12 -05:00
126453d473 Back-patch src/timezone/known_abbrevs.txt into all active branches.
Needed so that timezone data update patches can be cherry-picked
into older branches conveniently.
2013-12-01 14:09:53 -05:00
52898e005f Fix pg_dumpall to work for databases flagged as read-only.
pg_dumpall's charter is to be able to recreate a database cluster's
contents in a virgin installation, but it was failing to honor that
contract if the cluster had any ALTER DATABASE SET
default_transaction_read_only settings.  By including a SET command
for the connection for each connection opened by pg_dumpall output,
errors are avoided and the source cluster is successfully
recreated.

There was discussion of whether to also set this for the connection
applying pg_dump output, but it was felt that it was both less
appropriate in that context, and far easier to work around.

Backpatch to all supported branches.
2013-11-30 12:07:05 -06:00
a74f50a3f6 Prevent possible compiler warnings.
Back-patch commit a3e8486dff into the 9.0
branch.  This is the only warning I'm seeing in the live branches with
gcc 4.4.7 (other than the known "unused variable 'yyg'" flex lossage),
which makes it just annoying enough to want to clean up.
2013-11-30 11:12:16 -05:00
6d0b8cd2f3 Truncate pg_multixact/'s contents during crash recovery
Commit 9dc842f08 of 8.2 era prevented MultiXact truncation during crash
recovery, because there was no guarantee that enough state had been
setup, and because it wasn't deemed to be a good idea to remove data
during crash recovery anyway.  Since then, due to Hot-Standby, streaming
replication and PITR, the amount of time a cluster can spend doing crash
recovery has increased significantly, to the point that a cluster may
even never come out of it.  This has made not truncating the content of
pg_multixact/ not defensible anymore.

To fix, take care to setup enough state for multixact truncation before
crash recovery starts (easy since checkpoints contain the required
information), and move the current end-of-recovery actions to a new
TrimMultiXact() function, analogous to TrimCLOG().

At some later point, this should probably done similarly to the way
clog.c is doing it, which is to just WAL log truncations, but we can't
do that for the back branches.

Back-patch to 9.0.  8.4 also has the problem, but since there's no hot
standby there, it's much less pressing.  In 9.2 and earlier, this patch
is simpler than in newer branches, because multixact access during
recovery isn't required.  Add appropriate checks to make sure that's not
happening.

Andres Freund
2013-11-29 22:02:15 -03:00
4ab4e5c6bb Fix assorted issues in pg_ctl's pgwin32_CommandLine().
Ensure that the invocation command for postgres or pg_ctl runservice
double-quotes the executable's pathname; failure to do this leads to
trouble when the path contains spaces.

Also, ensure that the path ends in ".exe" in both cases and uses
backslashes rather than slashes as directory separators.  The latter issue
is reported to confuse some third-party tools such as Symantec Backup Exec.

Also, rewrite the function to avoid buffer overrun issues by using a
PQExpBuffer instead of a fixed-size static buffer.  Combinations of
very long executable pathnames and very long data directory pathnames
could have caused trouble before, for example.

Back-patch to all active branches, since this code has been like this
for a long while.

Naoya Anzai and Tom Lane, reviewed by Rajeev Rastogi
2013-11-29 18:34:22 -05:00
ba63799598 Don't update relfrozenxid if any pages were skipped.
Vacuum recognizes that it can update relfrozenxid by checking whether it has
processed all pages of a relation. Unfortunately it performed that check
after truncating the dead pages at the end of the relation, and used the new
number of pages to decide whether all pages have been scanned. If the new
number of pages happened to be smaller or equal to the number of pages
scanned, it incorrectly decided that all pages were scanned.

This can lead to relfrozenxid being updated, even though some pages were
skipped that still contain old XIDs. That can lead to data loss due to xid
wraparounds with some rows suddenly missing. This likely has escaped notice
so far because it takes a large number (~2^31) of xids being used to see the
effect, while a full-table vacuum before that would fix the issue.

The incorrect logic was introduced by commit
b4b6923e03. Backpatch this fix down to 8.4,
like that commit.

Andres Freund, with some modifications by me.
2013-11-27 13:43:18 +02:00
ddd8416e40 ECPG: Fix offset to NULL/size indicator array.
Patch by Boszormenyi Zoltan <zb@cybertec.at>
2013-11-26 17:31:45 +01:00
7bee2e3e55 ECPG: Make the preprocessor emit ';' if the variable type for a list of
variables is varchar. This fixes this test case:

int main(void)
{
    exec sql begin declare section;
    varchar a[50], b[50];
    exec sql end declare section;

    return 0;
}

Since varchars are internally turned into custom structs and
the type name is emitted for these variable declarations,
the preprocessed code previously had:

struct varchar_1  { ... }  a _,_  struct varchar_2  { ... }  b ;

The comma in the generated C file was a syntax error.

There are no regression test changes since it's not exercised.

Patch by Boszormenyi Zoltan <zb@cybertec.at>

Conflicts:
	src/interfaces/ecpg/preproc/ecpg.trailer
2013-11-26 17:31:39 +01:00
cd5316f67d Defend against bad trigger definitions in contrib/lo's lo_manage() trigger.
This function formerly crashed if called as a statement-level trigger,
or if a column-name argument wasn't given.

In passing, add the trigger name to all error messages from the function.
(None of them are expected cases, so this shouldn't pose any compatibility
risk.)

Marc Cousin, reviewed by Sawada Masahiko
2013-11-23 22:46:15 -05:00
747dd9724c Fix array slicing of int2vector and oidvector values.
The previous coding labeled expressions such as pg_index.indkey[1:3] as
being of int2vector type; which is not right because the subscript bounds
of such a result don't, in general, satisfy the restrictions of int2vector.
To fix, implicitly promote the result of slicing int2vector to int2[],
or oidvector to oid[].  This is similar to what we've done with domains
over arrays, which is a good analogy because these types are very much
like restricted domains of the corresponding regular-array types.

A side-effect is that we now also forbid array-element updates on such
columns, eg while "update pg_index set indkey[4] = 42" would have worked
before if you were superuser (and corrupted your catalogs irretrievably,
no doubt) it's now disallowed.  This seems like a good thing since, again,
some choices of subscripting would've led to results not satisfying the
restrictions of int2vector.  The case of an array-slice update was
rejected before, though with a different error message than you get now.
We could make these cases work in future if we added a cast from int2[]
to int2vector (with a cast function checking the subscript restrictions)
but it seems unlikely that there's any value in that.

Per report from Ronan Dunklau.  Back-patch to all supported branches
because of the crash risks involved.
2013-11-23 20:04:10 -05:00
ec6a6a268a Ensure _dosmaperr() actually sets errno correctly.
If logging is enabled, either ereport() or fprintf() might stomp on errno
internally, causing this function to return the wrong result.  That might
only end in a misleading error report, but in any code that's examining
errno to decide what to do next, the consequences could be far graver.

This has been broken since the very first version of this file in 2006
... it's a bit astonishing that we didn't identify this long ago.

Reported by Amit Kapila, though this isn't his proposed fix.
2013-11-23 18:24:54 -05:00
44032290dd Avoid potential buffer overflow crash
A pointer to a C string was treated as a pointer to a "name" datum and
passed to SPI_execute_plan().  This pointer would then end up being
passed through datumCopy(), which would try to copy the entire 64 bytes
of name data, thus running past the end of the C string.  Fix by
converting the string to a proper name structure.

Found by LLVM AddressSanitizer.
2013-11-23 07:31:32 -05:00
612f953c7c Flatten join alias Vars before pulling up targetlist items from a subquery.
pullup_replace_vars()'s decisions about whether a pulled-up replacement
expression needs to be wrapped in a PlaceHolderVar depend on the assumption
that what looks like a Var behaves like a Var.  However, if the Var is a
join alias reference, later flattening of join aliases might replace the
Var with something that's not a Var at all, and should have been wrapped.

To fix, do a forcible pass of flatten_join_alias_vars() on the subquery
targetlist before we start to copy items out of it.  We'll re-run that
processing on the pulled-up expressions later, but that's harmless.

Per report from Ken Tanzer; the added regression test case is based on his
example.  This bug has been there since the PlaceHolderVar mechanism was
invented, but has escaped detection because the circumstances that trigger
it are fairly narrow.  You need a flattenable query underneath an outer
join, which contains another flattenable query inside a join of its own,
with a dangerous expression (a constant or something else non-strict)
in that one's targetlist.

Having seen this, I'm wondering if it wouldn't be prudent to do all
alias-variable flattening earlier, perhaps even in the rewriter.
But that would probably not be a back-patchable change.
2013-11-22 14:37:35 -05:00
b4f697f8eb Fix Hot-Standby initialization of clog and subtrans.
These bugs can cause data loss on standbys started with hot_standby=on at
the moment they start to accept read only queries, by marking committed
transactions as uncommited. The likelihood of such corruptions is small
unless the primary has a high transaction rate.

5a031a5556 fixed bugs in HS's startup logic
by maintaining less state until at least STANDBY_SNAPSHOT_PENDING state
was reached, missing the fact that both clog and subtrans are written to
before that. This only failed to fail in common cases because the usage
of ExtendCLOG in procarray.c was superflous since clog extensions are
actually WAL logged.

f44eedc3f0f347a856eea8590730769125964597/I then tried to fix the missing
extensions of pg_subtrans due to the former commit's changes - which are
not WAL logged - by performing the extensions when switching to a state
> STANDBY_INITIALIZED and not performing xid assignments before that -
again missing the fact that ExtendCLOG is unneccessary - but screwed up
twice: Once because latestObservedXid wasn't updated anymore in that
state due to the earlier commit and once by having an off-by-one error in
the loop performing extensions. This means that whenever a
CLOG_XACTS_PER_PAGE (32768 with default settings) boundary was crossed
between the start of the checkpoint recovery started from and the first
xl_running_xact record old transactions commit bits in pg_clog could be
overwritten if they started and committed in that window.

Fix this mess by not performing ExtendCLOG() in HS at all anymore since
it's unneeded and evidently dangerous and by performing subtrans
extensions even before reaching STANDBY_SNAPSHOT_PENDING.

Analysis and patch by Andres Freund. Reported by Christophe Pettus.
Backpatch down to 9.0, like the previous commit that caused this.
2013-11-22 14:49:07 +02:00
32b32845e0 Fix incorrect loop counts in tidbitmap.c.
A couple of places that should have been iterating over WORDS_PER_CHUNK
words were iterating over WORDS_PER_PAGE words instead.  This thinko
accidentally failed to fail, because (at least on common architectures
with default BLCKSZ) WORDS_PER_CHUNK is a bit less than WORDS_PER_PAGE,
and the extra words being looked at were always zero so nothing happened.
Still, it's a bug waiting to happen if anybody ever fools with the
parameters affecting TIDBitmap sizes, and it's a small waste of cycles
too.  So back-patch to all active branches.

Etsuro Fujita
2013-11-15 18:34:34 -05:00
1821ef15bd Clarify CREATE FUNCTION documentation about handling of typmods.
The previous text was a bit misleading, as well as unnecessarily vague
about what information would be discarded.  Per gripe from Craig Skinner.
2013-11-13 13:26:51 -05:00
0b336fb963 Fix doc links in README file to work with new website layout
Per report from Colin 't Hart
2013-11-12 12:54:43 +01:00
4b099e1bff Fix race condition in GIN posting tree page deletion.
If a page is deleted, and reused for something else, just as a search is
following a rightlink to it from its left sibling, the search would continue
scanning whatever the new contents of the page are. That could lead to
incorrect query results, or even something more curious if the page is
reused for a different kind of a page.

To fix, modify the search algorithm to lock the next page before releasing
the previous one, and refrain from deleting pages from the leftmost branch
of the tree.

Add a new Concurrency section to the README, explaining why this works.
There is a lot more one could say about concurrency in GIN, but that's for
another patch.

Backpatch to all supported versions.
2013-11-08 22:23:16 +02:00
987f05e162 Make contain_volatile_functions/contain_mutable_functions look into SubLinks.
This change prevents us from doing inappropriate subquery flattening in
cases such as dangerous functions hidden inside a sub-SELECT in the
targetlist of another sub-SELECT.  That could result in unexpected behavior
due to multiple evaluations of a volatile function, as in a recent
complaint from Etienne Dube.  It's been questionable from the very
beginning whether these functions should look into subqueries (as noted in
their comments), and this case seems to provide proof that they should.

Because the new code only descends into SubLinks, not SubPlans or
InitPlans, the change only affects the planner's behavior during
prepjointree processing and not later on --- for example, you can still get
it to use a volatile function in an indexqual if you wrap the function in
(SELECT ...).  That's a historical behavior, for sure, but it's reasonable
given that the executor's evaluation rules for subplans don't depend on
whether there are volatile functions inside them.  In any case, we need to
constrain the behavioral change as narrowly as we can to make this
reasonable to back-patch.
2013-11-08 11:37:12 -05:00
8103f49c1f Be more robust when strerror() doesn't give a useful result.
Back-patch commits 8e68816cc2 and
8dace66e07 into the stable branches.
Buildfarm testing revealed no great portability surprises, and it
seems useful to have this robustness improvement in all branches.
2013-11-07 16:33:34 -05:00
352ab596fa Prevent creating window functions with default arguments.
Insertion of default arguments doesn't work for window functions, which is
likely to cause a crash at runtime if the implementation code doesn't check
the number of actual arguments carefully.  It doesn't seem worth working
harder than this for pre-9.2 branches.
2013-11-06 13:32:30 -05:00
3dd13108ac Improve the error message given for modifying a window with frame clause.
For rather inscrutable reasons, SQL:2008 disallows copying-and-modifying a
window definition that has any explicit framing clause.  The error message
we gave for this only made sense if the referencing window definition
itself contains an explicit framing clause, which it might well not.
Moreover, in the context of an OVER clause it's not exactly obvious that
"OVER (windowname)" implies copy-and-modify while "OVER windowname" does
not.  This has led to multiple complaints, eg bug #5199 from Iliya
Krapchatov.  Change to a hopefully more intelligible error message, and
in the case where we have just "OVER (windowname)", add a HINT suggesting
that omitting the parentheses will fix it.  Also improve the related
documentation.  Back-patch to all supported branches.
2013-11-05 21:58:23 -05:00
da174fb039 Changed test case slightly so it doesn't have an unused typedef. 2013-11-03 16:18:10 +01:00
0c8462fd53 Ensure all files created for a single BufFile have the same resource owner.
Callers expect that they only have to set the right resource owner when
creating a BufFile, not during subsequent operations on it.  While we could
insist this be fixed at the caller level, it seems more sensible for the
BufFile to take care of it.  Without this, some temp files belonging to
a BufFile can go away too soon, eg at the end of a subtransaction,
leading to errors or crashes.

Reported and fixed by Andres Freund.  Back-patch to all active branches.
2013-11-01 16:10:03 -04:00
d81cd0430f Fix some odd behaviors when using a SQL-style simple GMT offset timezone.
Formerly, when using a SQL-spec timezone setting with a fixed GMT offset
(called a "brute force" timezone in the code), the session_timezone
variable was not updated to match the nominal timezone; rather, all code
was expected to ignore session_timezone if HasCTZSet was true.  This is
of course obviously fragile, though a search of the code finds only
timeofday() failing to honor the rule.  A bigger problem was that
DetermineTimeZoneOffset() supposed that if its pg_tz parameter was
pointer-equal to session_timezone, then HasCTZSet should override the
parameter.  This would cause datetime input containing an explicit zone
name to be treated as referencing the brute-force zone instead, if the
zone name happened to match the session timezone that had prevailed
before installing the brute-force zone setting (as reported in bug #8572).
The same malady could affect AT TIME ZONE operators.

To fix, set up session_timezone so that it matches the brute-force zone
specification, which we can do using the POSIX timezone definition syntax
"<abbrev>offset", and get rid of the bogus lookaside check in
DetermineTimeZoneOffset().  Aside from fixing the erroneous behavior in
datetime parsing and AT TIME ZONE, this will cause the timeofday() function
to print its result in the user-requested time zone rather than some
previously-set zone.  It might also affect results in third-party
extensions, if there are any that make use of session_timezone without
considering HasCTZSet, but in all cases the new behavior should be saner
than before.

Back-patch to all supported branches.
2013-11-01 12:13:33 -04:00
aad45bd54b Prevent using strncpy with src == dest in TupleDescInitEntry.
The C and POSIX standards state that strncpy's behavior is undefined when
source and destination areas overlap.  While it remains dubious whether any
implementations really misbehave when the pointers are exactly equal, some
platforms are now starting to force the issue by complaining when an
undefined call occurs.  (In particular OS X 10.9 has been seen to dump core
here, though the exact set of circumstances needed to trigger that remain
elusive.  Similar behavior can be expected to be optional on Linux and
other platforms in the near future.)  So tweak the code to explicitly do
nothing when nothing need be done.

Back-patch to all active branches.  In HEAD, this also lets us get rid of
an exception in valgrind.supp.

Per discussion of a report from Matthias Schmitt.
2013-10-28 20:49:38 -04:00
42ef7c87bf doc: Remove i18ngurus.com link
The web site is dead, and the Wayback Machine shows that it didn't have
much useful content before.
2013-10-21 06:23:56 -04:00
ca4967903d doc: fix typo in release notes
Backpatch through 8.4

Per suggestion by Amit Langote
2013-10-09 08:44:52 -04:00
a65e6c8217 Stamp 9.0.14. REL9_0_14 2013-10-07 23:12:23 -04:00
b7854a0722 docs: update release notes for 8.4.18, 9.0.14, 9.1.10, 9.2.5, 9.3.1 2013-10-07 21:35:01 -04:00
676f3d2e5a Translation updates 2013-10-07 16:12:32 -04:00
aeb366f795 doc: Correct psycopg URL 2013-10-02 21:34:40 -04:00
c5c87f065d Fix snapshot leak if lo_open called on non-existent object.
lo_open registers the currently active snapshot, and checks if the
large object exists after that. Normally, snapshots registered by lo_open
are unregistered at end of transaction when the lo descriptor is closed, but
if we error out before the lo descriptor is added to the list of open
descriptors, it is leaked. Fix by moving the snapshot registration to after
checking if the large object exists.

Reported by Pavel Stehule. Backpatch to 8.4. The snapshot registration
system was introduced in 8.4, so prior versions are not affected (and not
supported, anyway).
2013-09-30 12:58:51 +03:00
ca4ac3f6c4 Fix spurious warning after vacuuming a page on a table with no indexes.
There is a rare race condition, when a transaction that inserted a tuple
aborts while vacuum is processing the page containing the inserted tuple.
Vacuum prunes the page first, which normally removes any dead tuples, but
if the inserting transaction aborts right after that, the loop after
pruning will see a dead tuple and remove it instead. That's OK, but if the
page is on a table with no indexes, and the page becomes completely empty
after removing the dead tuple (or tuples) on it, it will be immediately
marked as all-visible. That's OK, but the sanity check in vacuum would
throw a warning because it thinks that the page contains dead tuples and
was nevertheless marked as all-visible, even though it just vacuumed away
the dead tuples and so it doesn't actually contain any.

Spotted this while reading the code. It's difficult to hit the race
condition otherwise, but can be done by putting a breakpoint after the
heap_page_prune() call.

Backpatch all the way to 8.4, where this code first appeared.
2013-09-26 11:39:13 +03:00
5d1629919b Fix pgindent comment breakage 2013-09-24 18:21:50 -03:00
1ba5fe8dd4 Fix SSL deadlock risk in libpq
In libpq, we set up and pass to OpenSSL callback routines to handle
locking.  When we run out of SSL connections, we try to clean things
up by de-registering the hooks.  Unfortunately, we had a few calls
into the OpenSSL library after these hooks were de-registered during
SSL cleanup which lead to deadlocking.  This moves the thread callback
cleanup to be after all SSL-cleanup related OpenSSL library calls.
I've been unable to reproduce the deadlock with this fix.

In passing, also move the close_SSL call to be after unlocking our
ssl_config mutex when in a failure state.  While it looks pretty
unlikely to be an issue, it could have resulted in deadlocks if we
ended up in this code path due to something other than SSL_new
failing.  Thanks to Heikki for pointing this out.

Back-patch to all supported versions; note that the close_SSL issue
only goes back to 9.0, so that hunk isn't included in the 8.4 patch.

Initially found and reported by Vesa-Matti J Kari; many thanks to
both Heikki and Andres for their help running down the specific
issue and reviewing the patch.
2013-09-23 08:43:15 -04:00
9553d0f03b Ignore interrupts during quickdie().
Once the administrator has called for an immediate shutdown or a backend
crash has triggered a reinitialization, no mere SIGINT or SIGTERM should
change that course.  Such derailment remains possible when the signal
arrives before quickdie() blocks signals.  That being a narrow race
affecting most PostgreSQL signal handlers in some way, leave it for
another patch.  Back-patch this to all supported versions.
2013-09-11 20:14:41 -04:00
994f68d15b Return error if allocation of new element was not possible.
Found by Coverity.
2013-09-08 13:13:32 +02:00
3f092dbedf Close file to no leak file descriptor memory. Found by Coverity. 2013-09-08 13:13:32 +02:00