delete the default argument from the node. This prevents the executor
from spitting up on the untransformed argument expression. Typical
failure was:
select (case f1 when 'val' then 'subst' else f1 end) from t1;
ERROR: copyObject: don't know how to copy 704
MyProcPid global variable is set to 0 when postgres starts as a command
(not as a backend daemon). This leads issuing SIGQUIT to the process group,
not the process itself. As a result, parent sh gets core dumped in the
Wisconsin benchmark test.
rather than reusing the input storage.
Also made the same fix to int8smaller(), though there wasn't a symptom,
and went through and verified that other pass-by-reference data types
do the same thing. Not an issue for the by-value types.
relation, rather than zeroes. This prevents the optimizer from making
foolish choices (ie, using nested-loop plans) on never-yet-vacuumed tables.
This is a hack, of course. Keeping accurate track of these statistics
would be a cleaner solution, but it's far from clear that it'd be worth
the cost of doing so. In any case we're not going to do that for 6.5.
In the meantime, this quick hack provides a useful performance improvement
in the regression tests and in many real-world scenarios.
time zone.
Previously, localtime() rotated a date with a day of month field which
exceeded the actual range into the next months, masking the fact that
a bad date had been specified.
Regression tests pass.
indexes.
1. Index Scan using plural indexids never scan backward
as to the order of indexids.
2. The cursor using Index scan is not usable after moving
past the end.
This patch solves above bugs.
Moreover the change of _bt_first() would be useful to extend
ORDER BY patch by Jan Wieck for all descending order cases.
Hiroshi Inoue
not-yet-defined operator in commutator, negator, etc links. This is
necessary in order to ensure that a pg_dump dump of user-defined operators
can be reloaded. There may still be a bug lurking here, because it's
provoking a 'Buffer Leak' notice message in one case. See my mail to
pgsql-hackers.
hashjoin's hashFunc() so that it does the right thing with pass-by-value
data types (the old code would always return 0 for int2 or char values,
which would work but would slow things down a lot). Extend opr_sanity
regress test to catch more kinds of errors.
called through fmgr. Someday we should try to actually execute the function,
but that looks like it might be a major feature addition.
Not something to try during beta phase.
function is found in prosrc field of pg_proc, not proname. This allows
multiple aliases of a built-in to all be implemented as direct builtins,
without needing a level of indirection through an SQL function. Replace
existing SQL alias functions with builtin entries accordingly.
Save a few K by not storing string names of builtin functions in fmgr's
internal table (if you really want 'em, get 'em from pg_proc...).
Update opr_sanity with a few more cross-checks.
2. Much faster btree tuples deletion in the case when first on page
index tuple is deleted (no movement to the left page(s)).
3. Remember blkno of new root page in BTPageOpaque of
left/right siblings when root page is splitted.
I have solved some problems with dynamic loading on NT. It is possible
to
run succesfully both trigger and plpgsql regression tests. The patch is
in
the included file "diff".
Dan