1
0
mirror of https://github.com/postgres/postgres.git synced 2025-05-28 05:21:27 +03:00

22062 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane
773f5cc8cb Fix contrib/xml2 makefile to not override CFLAGS. 2008-05-08 17:11:41 +00:00
Tom Lane
1fb9814d70 Fix ALTER TABLE ADD COLUMN ... PRIMARY KEY so that the new column is correctly
checked to see if it's been initialized to all non-nulls.  The implicit NOT
NULL constraint was not being checked during the ALTER (in fact, not even if
there was an explicit NOT NULL too), because ATExecAddColumn neglected to
set the flag needed to make the test happen.  This has been broken since
the capability was first added, in 8.0.

Brendan Jurd, per a report from Kaloyan Iliev.
2008-04-24 20:18:15 +00:00
Magnus Hagander
0f130711d0 Replace developer FAQ with a reference to the wiki, which is where
it now lives (per discussion). Leave the other FAQs alone for now.
2008-04-22 09:26:39 +00:00
Magnus Hagander
3cf4913d17 Add link to major version release notes at the top of the minor
version ones, to make it clear to users just browsing the notes
that there are a lot more changes available from whatever version
they are at than what's in the minor version release notes.
2008-04-21 09:45:05 +00:00
Tom Lane
52441adb15 Fix several datatype input functions that were allowing unused bytes in their
results to contain uninitialized, unpredictable values.  While this was okay
as far as the datatypes themselves were concerned, it's a problem for the
parser because occurrences of the "same" literal might not be recognized as
equal by datumIsEqual (and hence not by equal()).  It seems sufficient to fix
this in the input functions since the only critical use of equal() is in the
parser's comparisons of ORDER BY and DISTINCT expressions.
Per a trouble report from Marc Cousin.

Patch all the way back.  Interestingly, array_in did not have the bug before
8.2, which may explain why the issue went unnoticed for so long.
2008-04-11 22:53:16 +00:00
Michael Meskes
a0f770dbdc Fixed bug in PGTYPEStimestamp_sub that used pointers instead of the values to substract. 2008-04-10 10:46:34 +00:00
Tom Lane
19d262540c Defend against JOINs having more than 32K columns altogether. We cannot
currently support this because we must be able to build Vars referencing
join columns, and varattno is only 16 bits wide.  Perhaps this should be
improved in future, but considering that it never came up before, I'm not
sure the problem is worth much effort.  Per bug #4070 from Marcello
Ceschia.

The problem seems largely academic in 8.0 and 7.4, because they have
(different) O(N^2) performance issues with such wide joins, but
back-patch all the way anyway.
2008-04-05 01:58:42 +00:00
Tom Lane
80dc9a8e19 Fix a number of places that were making file-type tests infelicitously.
The places that did, eg,
	(statbuf.st_mode & S_IFMT) == S_IFDIR
were correct, but there is no good reason not to use S_ISDIR() instead,
especially when that's what the other 90% of our code does.  The places
that did, eg,
	(statbuf.st_mode & S_IFDIR)
were flat out *wrong* and would fail in various platform-specific ways,
eg a symlink could be mistaken for a regular file on most Unixen.

The actual impact of this is probably small, since the problem cases
seem to always involve symlinks or sockets, which are unlikely to be
found in the directories that PG code might be scanning.  But it's
clearly trouble waiting to happen, so patch all the way back anyway.
(There seem to be no occurrences of the mistake in 7.4.)
2008-03-31 01:32:48 +00:00
Tom Lane
207f469912 Fix core dump in contrib/xml2's xpath_table() when the input query returns
a NULL value.  Per bug #4058.
2008-03-26 01:19:23 +00:00
Tom Lane
1b304e8491 Adjust DatumGetBool macro so that it isn't fooled by garbage in the Datum
to the left of the actual bool value.  While in most cases there won't be
any, our support for old-style user-defined functions violates the C spec
to the extent of calling functions that might return char or short through
a function pointer declared to return "char *", which we then coerce to
Datum.  It is not surprising that the result might contain garbage
high-order bits ... what is surprising is that we didn't see such cases
long ago.  Per report from Magnus.

This is a back-patch of a change that was made in HEAD almost exactly
a year ago.  I had refrained from back-patching at the time, but now
we find that this is *necessary* for contrib to work with gcc 4.3.
2008-03-25 19:31:40 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas
242d0f9f6f Add the missing cyrillic "Yo" characters ('e' and 'E' with two dots) to the
ISO_8859-5 <-> MULE_INTERNAL conversion tables.

This was discovered when trying to convert a string containing those characters
from ISO_8859-5 to Windows-1251, because we use MULE_INTERNAL/KOI8R as an
intermediate encoding between those two.

While the missing "Yo" was just an omission in the conversion tables, there are
a few other characters like the "Numero" sign ("No" as a single character) that
exists in all the other cyrillic encodings (win1251, ISO_8859-5 and cp866), but
not in KOI8R. Added comments about that.

Patch by Sergey Burladyan. Back-patch to 7.4.
2008-03-20 10:38:34 +00:00
Tom Lane
c249e9ed30 Fix regexp substring matching (substring(string from pattern)) for the corner
case where there is a match to the pattern overall but the user has specified
a parenthesized subexpression and that subexpression hasn't got a match.
An example is substring('foo' from 'foo(bar)?').  This should return NULL,
since (bar) isn't matched, but it was mistakenly returning the whole-pattern
match instead (ie, 'foo').  Per bug #4044 from Rui Martins.

This has been broken since the beginning; patch in all supported versions.
The old behavior was sufficiently inconsistent that it's impossible to believe
anyone is depending on it.
2008-03-19 02:41:00 +00:00
Tom Lane
9d2e16125f Update to tzdata 2008a distribution (Chilean DST law change). 2008-03-13 19:22:04 +00:00
Tom Lane
e8051df2c1 Fix LISTEN/NOTIFY race condition reported by Laurent Birtz, by postponing
pg_listener modifications commanded by LISTEN and UNLISTEN until the end
of the current transaction.  This allows us to hold the ExclusiveLock on
pg_listener until after commit, with no greater risk of deadlock than there
was before.  Aside from fixing the race condition, this gets rid of a
truly ugly kludge that was there before, namely having to ignore
HeapTupleBeingUpdated failures during NOTIFY.  There is a small potential
incompatibility, which is that if a transaction issues LISTEN or UNLISTEN
and then looks into pg_listener before committing, it won't see any resulting
row insertion or deletion, where before it would have.  It seems unlikely
that anyone would be depending on that, though.

This patch also disallows LISTEN and UNLISTEN inside a prepared transaction.
That case had some pretty undesirable properties already, such as possibly
allowing pg_listener entries to be made for PIDs no longer present, so
disallowing it seems like a better idea than trying to maintain the behavior.
2008-03-12 20:12:14 +00:00
Tom Lane
77f5afc306 Use -fwrapv in CFLAGS if we are using a version of gcc that accepts this flag.
This prevents compiler optimizations that assume overflow won't occur, which
breaks numerous overflow tests that we need to have working.  It is known
that gcc 4.3 causes problems and possible that 4.1 does.  Per my proposal
of some time ago and a recent report from Kris Jurka.

Backpatch as far as 8.0, which is as far as the patch conveniently goes.
7.x was pretty short of overflow tests anyway, so it may not matter there,
even assuming that anyone cares whether 7.x builds on recent gcc.
2008-03-10 21:50:40 +00:00
Tom Lane
8576a07843 Change hashscan.c to keep its list of active hash index scans in
TopMemoryContext, rather than scattered through executor per-query contexts.
This poses no danger of memory leak since the ResourceOwner mechanism
guarantees release of no-longer-needed items.  It is needed because the
per-query context might already be released by the time we try to clean up
the hash scan list.  Report by ykhuang, diagnosis by Heikki.

Back-patch to 8.0, where the ResourceOwner-based cleanup was introduced.
The given test case does not fail before 8.2, probably because we rearranged
transaction abort processing somehow; but this coding is undoubtedly risky
so I'll patch 8.0 and 8.1 anyway.
2008-03-07 15:59:23 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera
712d0eecf8 Add support for dlopen on recent NetBSD/MIPS, per Rémi Zara. 2008-03-05 21:20:50 +00:00
Tom Lane
f40d8b5ef4 If RelationBuildDesc() fails to open a critical system index, PANIC with
a relevant error message instead of just dumping core.  Odd that nobody
reported this before Darren Reed.
2008-02-27 17:44:41 +00:00
Tom Lane
bac65d5240 Fix datetime input to behave correctly for Feb 29 in years BC.
Formerly, DecodeDate attempted to verify the day-of-the-month exactly, but
it was under the misapprehension that it would know whether we were looking
at a BC year or not.  In reality this check can't be made until the calling
function (eg DecodeDateTime) has processed all the fields.  So, split the
BC adjustment and validity checks out into a new function ValidateDate that
is called only after processing all the fields.  In passing, this patch
makes DecodeTimeOnly work for BC inputs, which it never did before.

(The historical veracity of all this is nonexistent, of course, but if
we're going to say we support proleptic Gregorian calendar then we should
do it correctly.  In any case the unpatched code is broken because it could
emit dates that it would then reject on re-inputting.)

Per report from Bernd Helmle.  Back-patch as far as 8.0; in 7.x we were
not using our own calendar support and so this seems a bit too risky
to put into 7.4.
2008-02-25 23:21:22 +00:00
Tom Lane
f004ac180a Use our own getopt() and getopt_long() on Solaris, because that platform's
versions don't handle long options the way we want.  Per Zdenek Kotala.
2008-02-24 05:22:22 +00:00
Tom Lane
0f6acc4509 Avoid trying to print a NULL char pointer in --describe-config. On some
platforms this works, but on some it crashes.  Zdenek Kotala
2008-02-23 19:23:51 +00:00
Tom Lane
f6b6c2420e Fix mistakes in pg_ctl's code for "start -w" that tries to cope with
non-default settings for the postmaster's port number.  The code to parse
command line options and postgresql.conf entries wasn't quite right about
whitespace or quotes, and it was coded in a not-very-readable way too.
Per bug #3969 from Itagaki Takahiro, though this is more extensive than his
proposed patch (which fixed only the whitespace problem).
This code has been broken since it was put in in 8.0, so patch all the way
back.
2008-02-20 22:18:35 +00:00
Tom Lane
63df2c788a Put a CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS call into the loops that try to find a unique new
OID or new relfilenode.  If the existing OIDs are sufficiently densely
populated, this could take a long time (perhaps even be an infinite loop),
so it seems wise to allow the system to respond to a cancel interrupt here.
Per a gripe from Jacky Leng.

Backpatch as far as 8.1.  Older versions just fail on OID collision,
instead of looping.
2008-02-20 17:44:26 +00:00
Tom Lane
e2429619b1 Repair VACUUM FULL bug introduced by HOT patch: the original way of
calculating a page's initial free space was fine, and should not have been
"improved" by letting PageGetHeapFreeSpace do it.  VACUUM FULL is going to
reclaim LP_DEAD line pointers later, so there is no need for a guard
against the page being too full of line pointers, and having one risks
rejecting pages that are perfectly good move destinations.

This also exposed a second bug, which is that the empty_end_pages logic
assumed that any page with no live tuples would get entered into the
fraged_pages list automatically (by virtue of having more free space than
the threshold in the do_frag calculation).  This assumption certainly
seems risky when a low fillfactor has been chosen, and even without
tunable fillfactor I think it could conceivably fail on a page with many
unused line pointers.  So fix the code to force do_frag true when notup
is true, and patch this part of the fix all the way back.

Per report from Tomas Szepe.
2008-02-11 19:14:45 +00:00
Tom Lane
4af5e12b59 Some variants of ALTER OWNER tried to make the "object" field of the
statement be a list of bare C strings, rather than String nodes, which is
what they need to be for copyfuncs/equalfuncs to work.  Fortunately these
node types never go out to disk (if they did, we'd likely have noticed the
problem sooner), so we can just fix it without creating a need for initdb.
This bug has been there since 8.0, but 8.3 exposes it in a more common
code path (Parse messages) than prior releases did.  Per bug #3940 from
Vladimir Kokovic.
2008-02-07 21:08:16 +00:00
Andrew Dunstan
08cf8603cf Work around for perl 5.10 bug - fix due to perl hacker Simon Cozens. 2008-01-22 20:41:39 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera
d3c7bd63b7 Backpatch my fix of rev 1.48 to avoid a division-by-zero error in the
cost-limit vacuum code.  Per trouble report from Joshua Drake.
2008-01-17 23:47:07 +00:00
Tom Lane
78f53d5a00 Fix an ancient oversight in libpq's handling of V3-protocol COPY OUT mode:
we need to be able to swallow NOTICE messages, and potentially also
ParameterStatus messages (although the latter would be a bit weird),
without exiting COPY OUT state.  Fix it, and adjust the protocol documentation
to emphasize the need for this.  Per off-list report from Alexander Galler.
2008-01-14 18:46:33 +00:00
Tom Lane
307a677873 A long time ago, Peter pointed out that ruleutils.c didn't dump simple
constant ORDER/GROUP BY entries properly:
http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2001-04/msg00457.php
The original solution to that was in fact no good, as demonstrated by
today's report from Martin Pitt:
http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-bugs/2008-01/msg00027.php
We can't use the column-number-reference format for a constant that is
a resjunk targetlist entry, a case that was unfortunately not thought of
in the original discussion.  What we can do instead (which did not work
at the time, but does work in 7.3 and up) is to emit the constant with
explicit ::typename decoration, even if it otherwise wouldn't need it.
This is sufficient to keep the parser from thinking it's a column number
reference, and indeed is probably what the user must have done to get
such a thing into the querytree in the first place.
2008-01-06 01:03:31 +00:00
Tom Lane
d419ce4568 Stamp release 8.1.11.
Security: CVE-2007-4769, CVE-2007-4772, CVE-2007-6067, CVE-2007-6600, CVE-2007-6601
REL8_1_11
2008-01-03 21:41:24 +00:00
Tom Lane
bf4d342f8e Update release notes for security releases.
Security: CVE-2007-4769, CVE-2007-4772, CVE-2007-6067, CVE-2007-6600, CVE-2007-6601
2008-01-03 21:35:49 +00:00
Tom Lane
148bd52da4 The original patch to disallow non-passworded connections to non-superusers
failed to cover all the ways in which a connection can be initiated in dblink.
Plug the remaining holes.  Also, disallow transient connections in functions
for which that feature makes no sense (because they are only sensible as
part of a sequence of operations on the same connection).  Joe Conway

Security: CVE-2007-6601
2008-01-03 21:28:30 +00:00
Tom Lane
46cf9c260d Make standard maintenance operations (including VACUUM, ANALYZE, REINDEX,
and CLUSTER) execute as the table owner rather than the calling user, using
the same privilege-switching mechanism already used for SECURITY DEFINER
functions.  The purpose of this change is to ensure that user-defined
functions used in index definitions cannot acquire the privileges of a
superuser account that is performing routine maintenance.  While a function
used in an index is supposed to be IMMUTABLE and thus not able to do anything
very interesting, there are several easy ways around that restriction; and
even if we could plug them all, there would remain a risk of reading sensitive
information and broadcasting it through a covert channel such as CPU usage.

To prevent bypassing this security measure, execution of SET SESSION
AUTHORIZATION and SET ROLE is now forbidden within a SECURITY DEFINER context.

Thanks to Itagaki Takahiro for reporting this vulnerability.

Security: CVE-2007-6600
2008-01-03 21:24:26 +00:00
Tom Lane
8b1de3b515 Fix assorted security-grade bugs in the regex engine. All of these problems
are shared with Tcl, since it's their code to begin with, and the patches
have been copied from Tcl 8.5.0.  Problems:

CVE-2007-4769: Inadequate check on the range of backref numbers allows
crash due to out-of-bounds read.
CVE-2007-4772: Infinite loop in regex optimizer for pattern '($|^)*'.
CVE-2007-6067: Very slow optimizer cleanup for regex with a large NFA
representation, as well as crash if we encounter an out-of-memory condition
during NFA construction.

Part of the response to CVE-2007-6067 is to put a limit on the number of
states in the NFA representation of a regex.  This seems needed even though
the within-the-code problems have been corrected, since otherwise the code
could try to use very large amounts of memory for a suitably-crafted regex,
leading to potential DOS by driving the system into swap, activating a kernel
OOM killer, etc.

Although there are certainly plenty of ways to drive the system into effective
DOS with poorly-written SQL queries, these problems seem worth treating as
security issues because many applications might accept regex search patterns
from untrustworthy sources.

Thanks to Will Drewry of Google for reporting these problems.  Patches by Will
Drewry and Tom Lane.

Security: CVE-2007-4769, CVE-2007-4772, CVE-2007-6067
2008-01-03 20:48:57 +00:00
Tom Lane
5ddd11b02d Insert ARST into the list of known timezone abbreviations. 2008-01-02 22:05:21 +00:00
Magnus Hagander
af3de8077e Fix invalid ipv6 address in example. Per doc comment 7211. 2008-01-02 19:53:19 +00:00
Tom Lane
a634642aa6 Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2007k. 2008-01-01 20:45:25 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
8cc239782c Provide a more helpful error message when there is an autoconf version
mismatch;  backpatch.
2007-12-31 17:28:12 +00:00
Tom Lane
5a351b66df Make path_recv() and poly_recv() reject paths/polygons containing no points.
The zero-point case is sensible so far as the data structure is concerned,
so maybe we ought to allow it sometime; but right now the textual input
routines for these types don't allow it, and it seems that not all the
functions for the types are prepared to cope.
Report and patch by Merlin Moncure.
2007-12-18 00:04:22 +00:00
Tom Lane
3c92d5fdd9 Suppress compiler warnings in recent plperl patch. Avoid uselessly expensive
lookup of the well-known OID of textout().
2007-12-01 17:58:54 +00:00
Andrew Dunstan
63276b7f6c Workaround for perl problem where evaluating UTF8 regexes can cause
implicit loading of modules, thereby breaking Safe rules.
We compile and call a tiny perl function on trusted interpreter init, after which
the problem does not occur.
2007-12-01 15:39:49 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut
f575dfc230 Require a specific Autoconf version, instead of a lower bound only. 2007-11-26 12:27:03 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera
4bf3801d59 Fix buggy usage of vsnprintf in PL/Python by removing it altogether, instead
relying on stringinfo.c.  This fixes a problem reported by Marko Kreen, but I
didn't use his patch, per subsequent discussion.
2007-11-23 01:47:12 +00:00
Tatsuo Ishii
d4becb639d Fix "Overall Page Layout" table. The second row should be ItemIdData, not
ItemPointerData.
2007-11-23 00:30:58 +00:00
Tom Lane
80848c001d Prevent Perl from introducing a possibly-incompatible definition of type
"bool" into plperl.c.  This has always been a hazard since Perl allows a
platform-specific choice to define bool as int rather than char, but
evidently this didn't happen on any platform we support ... until OS X 10.5.
Per report from Brandon Maust.

Back-patch as far as 8.0 --- a bit arbitrary, but it seems unlikely anyone
will be trying to port 7.x onto new platforms.
2007-11-22 17:47:40 +00:00
Teodor Sigaev
9275f2d34c Backpatch: Fix tsvector_out() and tsquery_out() to escape backslesh, add test of that.
Patch by Bruce Momjian <bruce@momjian.us>
2007-11-16 17:09:15 +00:00
Tom Lane
011e0efc15 Update timezone data files to release 2007i of the zic database. 2007-11-15 21:21:26 +00:00
Joe Conway
0b33e2066f Have crosstab variants treat NULL rowid as a category in its own right,
per suggestion from Tom Lane. This fixes crash-bug reported by Stefan
Schwarzer.
2007-11-10 05:01:50 +00:00
Tom Lane
8d31b6d24d Second pass at improving LIKE/regex estimation in non-C locales. It turns
out that it's actually quite likely that a string that is an extension of
the given prefix will sort as larger than the "greater" string our previous
code created.  To provide some defense against that, do the comparisons
against a modified string instead of just the bare prefix.  We tack on
"Z", "z", "y", or "9", whichever is seen as largest in the current locale.
Testing suggests that this is sufficient at least for cases involving
ASCII data.
2007-11-09 20:10:20 +00:00
Tom Lane
b4b939e455 If an index depends on no columns of its table, give it a dependency on the
whole table instead, to ensure that it goes away when the table is dropped.
Per bug #3723 from Sam Mason.

Backpatch as far as 7.4; AFAICT 7.3 does not have the issue, because it doesn't
have general-purpose expression indexes and so there must be at least one
column referenced by an index.
2007-11-08 23:23:07 +00:00