1) datetime_pl_span() added the seconds field before adding the months
field. This lead to erroneous results for e.g.
select datetime '1999-11-30' + timespan '1 mon - 1 sec';
Reverse the order of operations to add months first.
2) tm2timespan() did all intermediate math as integer, converting to double
at the very end. This resulted in hidden overflows when given very large
integer days, hours, etc. For example,
select '74565 days'::timespan;
produced the wrong result. Change code to ensure that doubles are used
for intermediate calculations.
Thanks to Olivier PRENANT <ohp@pyrenet.fr> and
Tulassay Zsolt <zsolt@tek.bke.hu> for problem reports and to Tom Lane for
accurate analyses.
relcache entry no longer leaks a small amount of memory. index_endscan
now releases all the memory acquired by index_beginscan, so callers of it
should NOT pfree the scan descriptor anymore.
SELECT null::text;
SELECT int4fac(null);
work as expected now. In some cases a NULL must be surrounded by
parentheses:
SELECT 2 + null; fails
SELECT 2 + (null); OK
This is a grammatical ambiguity that seems difficult to avoid. Other
than that, NULLs seem to behave about like you'd expect. The internal
implementation is that NULL constants are typed as UNKNOWN (like
untyped string constants) until the parser can deduce the right type.
with DEC C.
DEC C doesn't handle double values greater than DBL_MAX, but some
PostgreSQL geo functions assign greater than DBL_MAX values to some vars
in some special cases - that couses SIGFPE. I dunno if that is the only place
to fix to work well with DEC C.
Kirill Nosov.
rather than returning a NaN for bogus input to pow(). Namely, HPUX 10.20.
I think this is sufficient evidence for what I thought all along, which
is that the float.c code *must* look at errno whether finite() exists or
not.
equality. The lobits macro is wrong and extracts the wrong set of
bits out of the structure.
To exhibit the problem:
select '000000:000000'::macaddr = '000000:110000'::macaddr ;
?column?
--------
t
(1 row)
Daniel Boyd
I was able to crash postgres 6.5.3 when I did an 'alter user' command.
After I started a debugger I found the problem in the timezone handling
of
datetime (my Linux box lost its timezone information, that's how the
problem occurred).
Only 7 bytes are reserved for the timezone, without checking for
boundaries.
Attached is a patch that fixes this problem and emits a NOTICE if a
timezone is encountered that is longer than MAXTZLEN bytes, like this:
Jeroen van Vianen
Make all system indexes unique.
Make all cache loads use system indexes.
Rename *rel to *relid in inheritance tables.
Rename cache names to be clearer.
subselects can only appear on the righthand side of a binary operator.
That's still true for quantified predicates like x = ANY (SELECT ...),
but a subselect that delivers a single result can now appear anywhere
in an expression. This is implemented by changing EXPR_SUBLINK sublinks
to represent just the (SELECT ...) expression, without any 'left hand
side' or combining operator --- so they're now more like EXISTS_SUBLINK.
To handle the case of '(x, y, z) = (SELECT ...)', I added a new sublink
type MULTIEXPR_SUBLINK, which acts just like EXPR_SUBLINK used to.
But the grammar will only generate one for a multiple-left-hand-side
row expression.
eliminating some wildly inconsistent coding in various parts of the
system. I set MAXPGPATH = 1024 in config.h.in. If anyone is really
convinced that there ought to be a configure-time test to set the
value, go right ahead ... but I think it's a waste of time.
expressions in CREATE TABLE. There is no longer an emasculated expression
syntax for these things; it's full a_expr for constraints, and b_expr
for defaults (unfortunately the fact that NOT NULL is a part of the
column constraint syntax causes a shift/reduce conflict if you try a_expr.
Oh well --- at least parenthesized boolean expressions work now). Also,
stored expression for a column default is not pre-coerced to the column
type; we rely on transformInsertStatement to do that when the default is
actually used. This means "f1 datetime default 'now'" behaves the way
people usually expect it to.
BTW, all the support code is now there to implement ALTER TABLE ADD
CONSTRAINT and ALTER TABLE ADD COLUMN with a default value. I didn't
actually teach ALTER TABLE to call it, but it wouldn't be much work.
they have no hardwired limit on the length of a rule's text. Fix a couple
of minor bugs in passing --- deparsed UPDATE queries didn't have quotes
around relation name, and quotes and backslashes in constant values weren't
backslash-quoted.
with no input rows, per pghackers discussions around 7/22/99. Clean up
a bunch of ugly coding while at it; remove redundant re-lookup of
aggregate info at start of each new GROUP. Arrange to pfree intermediate
values when they are pass-by-ref types, so that aggregates on pass-by-ref
types no longer eat memory. This takes care of a couple of TODO items...