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24608 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
ae42744e4e Fix pgstatindex() to give consistent results for empty indexes.
For an empty index, the pgstatindex() function would compute 0.0/0.0 for
its avg_leaf_density and leaf_fragmentation outputs.  On machines that
follow the IEEE float arithmetic standard with any care, that results in
a NaN.  However, per report from Rushabh Lathia, Microsoft couldn't
manage to get this right, so you'd get a bizarre error on Windows.

Fix by forcing the results to be NaN explicitly, rather than relying on
the division operator to give that or the snprintf function to print it
correctly.  I have some doubts that this is really the most useful
definition, but it seems better to remain backward-compatible with
those platforms for which the behavior wasn't completely broken.

Back-patch to 8.2, since the code is like that in all current releases.
2011-08-24 23:50:36 -04:00
6016005118 Fix performance problem when building a lossy tidbitmap.
As pointed out by Sergey Koposov, repeated invocations of tbm_lossify can
make building a large tidbitmap into an O(N^2) operation.  To fix, make
sure we remove more than the minimum amount of information per call, and
add a fallback path to behave sanely if we're unable to fit the bitmap
within the requested amount of memory.

This has been wrong since the tidbitmap code was written, so back-patch
to all supported branches.
2011-08-20 14:51:52 -04:00
44631eec32 Fix race condition in relcache init file invalidation.
The previous code tried to synchronize by unlinking the init file twice,
but that doesn't actually work: it leaves a window wherein a third process
could read the already-stale init file but miss the SI messages that would
tell it the data is stale.  The result would be bizarre failures in catalog
accesses, typically "could not read block 0 in file ..." later during
startup.

Instead, hold RelCacheInitLock across both the unlink and the sending of
the SI messages.  This is more straightforward, and might even be a bit
faster since only one unlink call is needed.

This has been wrong since it was put in (in 2002!), so back-patch to all
supported releases.
2011-08-16 13:12:29 -04:00
443a44ba62 Avoid integer overflow when LIMIT + OFFSET >= 2^63.
This fixes bug #6139 reported by Hitoshi Harada.
2011-08-02 11:31:55 +03:00
8daf82ef85 Fix pg_restore's direct-to-database mode for standard_conforming_strings.
pg_backup_db.c contained a mini SQL lexer with which it tried to identify
boundaries between SQL commands, but that code was not designed to cope
with standard_conforming_strings, and would get the wrong answer if a
backslash immediately precedes a closing single quote in such a string,
as per report from Julian Mehnle.  The bug only affects direct-to-database
restores from archive files made with standard_conforming_strings = on.

Rather than complicating the code some more to try to fix that, let's just
rip it all out.  The only reason it was needed was to cope with COPY data
embedded into ordinary archive entries, which was a layout that was used
only for about the first three weeks of the archive format's existence,
and never in any production release of pg_dump.  Instead, just rely on the
archive file layout to tell us whether we're printing COPY data or not.

This bug represents a data corruption hazard in all releases in which
standard_conforming_strings can be turned on, ie 8.2 and later, so
back-patch to all supported branches.
2011-07-28 14:07:28 -04:00
c4222d3880 Add missing newlines at end of error messages 2011-07-26 23:24:57 +03:00
a5b0d95744 Use OpenSSL's SSL_MODE_ACCEPT_MOVING_WRITE_BUFFER flag.
This disables an entirely unnecessary "sanity check" that causes failures
in nonblocking mode, because OpenSSL complains if we move or compact the
write buffer.  The only actual requirement is that we not modify pending
data once we've attempted to send it, which we don't.  Per testing and
research by Martin Pihlak, though this fix is a lot simpler than his patch.

I put the same change into the backend, although it's less clear whether
it's necessary there.  We do use nonblock mode in some situations in
streaming replication, so seems best to keep the same behavior in the
backend as in libpq.

Back-patch to all supported releases.
2011-07-24 15:18:16 -04:00
18e52ae172 Adapted expected result for latest change to ecpglib. 2011-07-18 19:22:03 +02:00
e9a1a0d00b Made ecpglib write double with a precision of 15 digits.
Patch by Akira Kurosawa <kurosawa-akira@mxc.nes.nec.co.jp>.
2011-07-18 16:34:24 +02:00
e2bf629599 Fix two ancient bugs in GiST code to re-find a parent after page split:
First, when following a right-link, we incorrectly marked the current page
as the parent of the right sibling. In reality, the parent of the right page
is the same as the parent of the current page (or some page to the right of
it, gistFindCorrectParent() will sort that out).

Secondly, when we follow a right-link, we must prepend, not append, the right
page to our list of pages to visit. That's because we assume that once we
hit a leaf page in the list, all the rest are leaf pages too, and give up.

To hit these bugs, you need concurrent actions and several unlucky accidents.
Another backend must split the root page, while you're in process of
splitting a lower-level page. Furthermore, while you scan the internal nodes
to re-find the parent, another backend needs to again split some more internal
pages. Even then, the bugs don't necessarily manifest as user-visible errors
or index corruption.

While we're at it, make the error reporting a bit better if gistFindPath()
fails to re-find the parent. It used to be an assertion, but an elog() seems
more appropriate.

Backpatch to all supported branches.
2011-07-15 11:06:12 +03:00
335a00ab57 Remove excessively backpatched gitignore files
These caused directories from future releases to appear in the
backbranch tree.
2011-07-11 19:07:26 +03:00
71a436847b Fix psql's counting of script file line numbers during COPY.
handleCopyIn incremented pset.lineno for each line of COPY data read from
a file.  This is correct when reading from the current script file (i.e.,
we are doing COPY FROM STDIN followed by in-line data), but it's wrong if
the data is coming from some other file.  Per bug #6083 from Steve Haslam.
Back-patch to all supported versions.
2011-07-05 12:07:03 -04:00
41fd969289 Back-patch creation of tar.bz2 tarball during "make dist".
Since commit a4d03bbcda, "make dist" has
built both gzip- and bzip2-compressed tarballs.  However, this was
pretty useless, because our tarball build script didn't know about it
and proceeded to overwrite the bz2 file with new data.  Back-patch the
change to all active branches, so that creation of the tar.bz2 file
can be removed from the build script.
2011-07-03 16:40:37 -04:00
457c2d9158 Apply upstream fix for blowfish signed-character bug (CVE-2011-2483).
A password containing a character with the high bit set was misprocessed
on machines where char is signed (which is most).  This could cause the
preceding one to three characters to fail to affect the hashed result,
thus weakening the password.  The result was also unportable, and failed
to match some other blowfish implementations such as OpenBSD's.

Since the fix changes the output for such passwords, upstream chose
to provide a compatibility hack: password salts beginning with $2x$
(instead of the usual $2a$ for blowfish) are intentionally processed
"wrong" to give the same hash as before.  Stored password hashes can
thus be modified if necessary to still match, though it'd be better
to change any affected passwords.

In passing, sync a couple other upstream changes that marginally improve
performance and/or tighten error checking.

Back-patch to all supported branches.  Since this issue is already
public, no reason not to commit the fix ASAP.
2011-06-21 14:42:34 -04:00
66cab2b600 Fix missed use of "cp -i" in an example, per Fujii Masao.
Also be more careful about markup: use &amp; not just &.
2011-06-20 16:27:51 -04:00
26996cf78e Don't use "cp -i" in the example WAL archive_command.
This is a dangerous example to provide because on machines with GNU cp,
it will silently do the wrong thing and risk archive corruption.  Worse,
during the 9.0 cycle somebody "improved" the discussion by removing the
warning that used to be there about that, and instead leaving the
impression that the command would work as desired on most Unixen.
It doesn't.  Try to rectify the damage by providing an example that is safe
most everywhere, and then noting that you can try cp -i if you want but
you'd better test that.

In back-patching this to all supported branches, I also added an example
command for Windows, which wasn't provided before 9.0.
2011-06-17 19:13:25 -04:00
6c320b8ab8 Obtain table locks as soon as practical during pg_dump.
For some reason, when we (I) added table lock acquisition to pg_dump,
we didn't think about making it happen as soon as possible after the
start of the transaction.  What with subsequent additions, there was
actually quite a lot going on before we got around to that; which sort
of defeats the purpose.  Rearrange the order of calls in dumpSchema()
to close the risk window as much as we easily can.  Back-patch to all
supported branches.
2011-06-17 18:19:31 -04:00
199d449c07 Add overflow checks to int4 and int8 versions of generate_series().
The previous code went into an infinite loop after overflow.  In fact,
an overflow is not really an error; it just means that the current
value is the last one we need to return.  So, just arrange to stop
immediately when overflow is detected.

Back-patch all the way.
2011-06-17 14:33:03 -04:00
07bc6fe668 Suppress -arch switches in the output of ExtUtils::Embed.
We previously found out that OS X's standard perl installation tries to put
-arch switches into Perl link commands, evidently in hopes of building
universal binaries.  But it doesn't work to add such switches in plperl's
link step if they weren't being used earlier, so this is basically
unworkable.  When using gcc the result is only some warnings; but LLVM
fails entirely, so this issue isn't as cosmetic as we originally thought.
Hence, back-patch commit d69a419e68 into
pre-9.0 branches.
2011-06-14 17:14:11 -04:00
1f5e6cd905 Fix assorted issues with build and install paths containing spaces.
Apparently there is no buildfarm critter exercising this case after all,
because it fails in several places.  With this patch, build, install,
check-world, and installcheck-world pass for me on OS X.
2011-06-14 16:39:47 -04:00
8f1eaf884d Fix aboriginal copy-paste mistake in error message
Spotted by Jaime Casanova
2011-06-13 17:50:30 -04:00
0f452e8ef4 Work around gcc 4.6.0 bug that breaks WAL replay.
ReadRecord's habit of using both direct references to tmpRecPtr and
references to *RecPtr (which is pointing at tmpRecPtr) triggers an
optimization bug in gcc 4.6.0, which apparently has forgotten about
aliasing rules.  Avoid the compiler bug, and make the code more readable
to boot, by getting rid of the direct references.  Improve the comments
while at it.

Back-patch to all supported versions, in case they get built with 4.6.0.

Tom Lane, with some cosmetic suggestions from Alex Hunsaker
2011-06-10 17:03:27 -04:00
e5b50d0ffb Fix documentation of information_schema.element_types
The documentation of the columns collection_type_identifier and
dtd_identifier was wrong.  This effectively reverts commits
8e1ccad519 and
57352df66d and updates the name
array_type_identifier (the name in SQL:1999) to
collection_type_identifier.

closes bug #5926
2011-06-09 07:38:14 +03:00
f604891a06 Allow building with perl 5.14.
Patch from Alex Hunsaker.
2011-06-04 19:37:50 -04:00
b9544a070b ECPG documentation fixes
Marc Cousin
2011-06-04 22:53:30 +03:00
eb6af646be Expose the "*VALUES*" alias that we generate for a stand-alone VALUES list.
We were trying to make that strictly an internal implementation detail,
but it turns out that it's exposed anyway when dumping a view defined
like
	CREATE VIEW test_view AS VALUES (1), (2), (3) ORDER BY 1;
This comes out as
	CREATE VIEW ... ORDER BY "*VALUES*".column1;
which fails to parse when reloading the dump.

Hacking ruleutils.c to suppress the column qualification looks like it'd
be a risky business, so instead promote the RTE alias to full-fledged
usability.

Per bug #6049 from Dylan Adams.  Back-patch to all supported branches.
2011-06-04 15:48:41 -04:00
f0d72ef638 Clean up after erroneous SELECT FOR UPDATE/SHARE on a sequence.
My previous commit disallowed this operation, but did nothing about
cleaning up the damage if one had already been done.  With the operation
disallowed, it's okay to just forcibly clear xmax in a sequence's tuple,
since any value seen there could not represent a live transaction's lock.
So, any sequence-specific operation will repair the problem automatically,
whether or not the user has already seen "could not access status of
transaction" failures.
2011-06-02 15:31:28 -04:00
a12899e76b Disallow SELECT FOR UPDATE/SHARE on sequences.
We can't allow this because such an operation stores its transaction XID
into the sequence tuple's xmax.  Because VACUUM doesn't process sequences
(and we don't want it to start doing so), such an xmax value won't get
frozen, meaning it will eventually refer to nonexistent pg_clog storage,
and even wrap around completely.  Since the row lock is ignored by nextval
and setval, the usefulness of the operation is highly debatable anyway.
Per reports of trouble with pgpool 3.0, which had ill-advisedly started
using such commands as a form of locking.

In HEAD, also disallow SELECT FOR UPDATE/SHARE on toast tables.  Although
this does work safely given the current implementation, there seems no
good reason to allow it.  I refrained from changing that behavior in
back branches, however.
2011-06-02 14:46:37 -04:00
08779dc699 Protect GIST logic that assumes penalty values can't be negative.
Apparently sane-looking penalty code might return small negative values,
for example because of roundoff error.  This will confuse places like
gistchoose().  Prevent problems by clamping negative penalty values to
zero.  (Just to be really sure, I also made it force NaNs to zero.)
Back-patch to all supported branches.

Alexander Korotkov
2011-05-31 17:54:11 -04:00
fccef77183 Fix portability bugs in use of credentials control messages for peer auth.
Even though our existing code for handling credentials control messages has
been basically unchanged since 2001, it was fundamentally wrong: it did not
ensure proper alignment of the supplied buffer, and it was calculating
buffer sizes and message sizes incorrectly.  This led to failures on
platforms where alignment padding is relevant, for instance FreeBSD on
64-bit platforms, as seen in a recent Debian bug report passed on by
Martin Pitt (http://bugs.debian.org//cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=612888).

Rewrite to do the message-whacking using the macros specified in RFC 2292,
following a suggestion from Theo de Raadt in that thread.  Tested by me
on Debian/kFreeBSD-amd64; since OpenBSD and NetBSD document the identical
CMSG API, it should work there too.

Back-patch to all supported branches.
2011-05-30 19:16:28 -04:00
6d24189b41 Make decompilation of optimized CASE constructs more robust.
We had some hacks in ruleutils.c to cope with various odd transformations
that the optimizer could do on a CASE foo WHEN "CaseTestExpr = RHS" clause.
However, the fundamental impossibility of covering all cases was exposed
by Heikki, who pointed out that the "=" operator could get replaced by an
inlined SQL function, which could contain nearly anything at all.  So give
up on the hacks and just print the expression as-is if we fail to recognize
it as "CaseTestExpr = RHS".  (We must cover that case so that decompiled
rules print correctly; but we are not under any obligation to make EXPLAIN
output be 100% valid SQL in all cases, and already could not do so in some
other cases.)  This approach requires that we have some printable
representation of the CaseTestExpr node type; I used "CASE_TEST_EXPR".

Back-patch to all supported branches, since the problem case fails in all.
2011-05-26 19:26:12 -04:00
ea393e4973 Install defenses against overflow in BuildTupleHashTable().
The planner can sometimes compute very large values for numGroups, and in
cases where we have no alternative to building a hashtable, such a value
will get fed directly to BuildTupleHashTable as its nbuckets parameter.
There were two ways in which that could go bad.  First, BuildTupleHashTable
declared the parameter as "int" but most callers were passing "long"s,
so on 64-bit machines undetected overflow could occur leading to a bogus
negative value.  The obvious fix for that is to change the parameter to
"long", which is what I've done in HEAD.  In the back branches that seems a
bit risky, though, since third-party code might be calling this function.
So for them, just put in a kluge to treat negative inputs as INT_MAX.
Second, hash_create can go nuts with extremely large requested table sizes
(notably, my_log2 becomes an infinite loop for inputs larger than
LONG_MAX/2).  What seems most appropriate to avoid that is to bound the
initial table size request to work_mem.

This fixes bug #6035 reported by Daniel Schreiber.  Although the reported
case only occurs back to 8.4 since it involves WITH RECURSIVE, I think
it's a good idea to install the defenses in all supported branches.
2011-05-23 12:53:05 -04:00
1f57a2f4dd Replace strdup() with pstrdup(), to avoid leaking memory.
It's been like this since the seg module was introduced, so backpatch to
8.2 which is the oldest supported version.
2011-05-18 22:36:37 -04:00
a7d3110638 Fix write-past-buffer-end in ldapServiceLookup().
The code to assemble ldap_get_values_len's output into a single string
wrote the terminating null one byte past where it should.  Fix that,
and make some other cosmetic adjustments to make the code a trifle more
readable and more in line with usual Postgres coding style.

Also, free the "result" string when done with it, to avoid a permanent
memory leak.

Bug report and patch by Albe Laurenz, cosmetic adjustments by me.
2011-05-12 11:57:26 -04:00
7b9bbb68e3 Catch errors in for loop in makefile
Add "|| exit" so that the rule aborts when a command fails.

This is the minimal backpatch version.  The fix in head is more
elaborate.
2011-05-02 00:54:02 +03:00
9b51d50c2f Rewrite pg_size_pretty() to avoid compiler bug.
Convert it to use successive shifts right instead of increasing a divisor.
This is probably a tad more efficient than the original coding, and it's
nicer-looking than the previous patch because we don't need a special case
to avoid overflow in the last branch.  But the real reason to do it is to
avoid a Solaris compiler bug, as per results from buildfarm member moa.
2011-04-29 01:45:27 -04:00
1aa24e2024 The arguments to pg_ctl kill are not optional - remove brackets in the docs.
Fujii Masao
2011-04-28 12:57:14 +03:00
ed849420ea Fix array- and path-creating functions to ensure padding bytes are zeroes.
Per recent discussion, it's important for all computed datums (not only the
results of input functions) to not contain any ill-defined (uninitialized)
bits.  Failing to ensure that can result in equal() reporting that
semantically indistinguishable Consts are not equal, which in turn leads to
bizarre and undesirable planner behavior, such as in a recent example from
David Johnston.  We might eventually try to fix this in a general manner by
allowing datatypes to define identity-testing functions, but for now the
path of least resistance is to expect datatypes to force all unused bits
into consistent states.

Per some testing by Noah Misch, array and path functions seem to be the
only ones presenting risks at the moment, so I looked through all the
functions in adt/array*.c and geo_ops.c and fixed them as necessary.  In
the array functions, the easiest/safest fix is to allocate result arrays
with palloc0 instead of palloc.  Possibly in future someone will want to
look into whether we can just zero the padding bytes, but that looks too
complex for a back-patchable fix.  In the path functions, we already had a
precedent in path_in for just zeroing the one known pad field, so duplicate
that code as needed.

Back-patch to all supported branches.
2011-04-27 13:58:59 -04:00
d3964cdb9c Fix pg_size_pretty() to avoid overflow for inputs close to INT64_MAX.
The expression that tried to round the value to the nearest TB could
overflow, leading to bogus output as reported in bug #5993 from Nicola
Cossu.  This isn't likely to ever happen in the intended usage of the
function (if it could, we'd be needing to use a wider datatype instead);
but it's not hard to give the expected output, so let's do so.
2011-04-25 16:22:28 -04:00
1e289824b6 Tag 8.2.21. REL8_2_21 2011-04-15 00:19:01 -03:00
3c9791557f Translation updates 2011-04-14 23:30:54 +03:00
3d2835ec6a Update release notes for releases 9.0.4, 8.4.8, 8.3.15, and 8.2.21. 2011-04-14 15:51:55 -04:00
18659751ea Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2011f.
DST law changes in Chile, Cuba, Falkland Islands, Morocco, Samoa, Turkey.
Historical corrections for South Australia, Alaska, Hawaii.
2011-04-13 18:05:23 -04:00
4f5ed3a1cd On IA64 architecture, we check the depth of the register stack in addition
to the regular stack. The code to do that is platform and compiler specific,
add support for the HP-UX native compiler.
2011-04-13 11:53:30 +03:00
1de4b9afe6 Modernize dlopen interface code for FreeBSD and OpenBSD.
Remove the hard-wired assumption that __mips__ (and only __mips__) lacks
dlopen in FreeBSD and OpenBSD.  This assumption is outdated at least for
OpenBSD, as per report from an anonymous 9.1 tester.  We can perfectly well
use HAVE_DLOPEN instead to decide which code to use.

Some other cosmetic adjustments to make freebsd.c, netbsd.c, and openbsd.c
exactly alike.
2011-04-07 15:15:00 -04:00
00a9229060 Fix SortTocFromFile() to cope with lines that are too long for its buffer.
The original coding supposed that a dump TOC file could never contain lines
longer than 1K.  The folly of that was exposed by a recent report from
Per-Olov Esgard.  We only really need to see the first dozen or two bytes
of each line, since we're just trying to read off the numeric ID at the
start of the line; so there's no need for a particularly huge buffer.
What there is a need for is logic to not process continuation bufferloads.

Back-patch to all supported branches, since it's always been like this.
2011-04-07 11:40:44 -04:00
93acf043b2 Correct "characters" to "bytes" in createdb docs.
Susanne Ebrecht
2011-03-27 21:29:32 -04:00
63fe94d165 Improve user-defined-aggregates documentation.
On closer inspection, that two-element initcond value seems to have been
a little white lie to avoid explaining the full behavior of float8_accum.
But if people are going to expect the examples to be exactly correct,
I suppose we'd better explain.  Per comment from Thom Brown.
2011-03-23 16:57:41 -04:00
24cdee8606 Fix ancient typo in user-defined-aggregates documentation.
The description of the initcond value for the built-in avg(float8)
aggregate has been wrong since it was written.  Noted by Disc Magnet.
2011-03-23 12:34:16 -04:00
e2d64f81a6 Avoid potential deadlock in InitCatCachePhase2().
Opening a catcache's index could require reading from that cache's own
catalog, which of course would acquire AccessShareLock on the catalog.
So the original coding here risks locking index before heap, which could
deadlock against another backend trying to get exclusive locks in the
normal order.  Because InitCatCachePhase2 is only called when a backend
has to start up without a relcache init file, the deadlock was seldom seen
in the field.  (And by the same token, there's no need to worry about any
performance disadvantage; so not much point in trying to distinguish
exactly which catalogs have the risk.)

Bug report, diagnosis, and patch by Nikhil Sontakke.  Additional commentary
by me.  Back-patch to all supported branches.
2011-03-22 13:01:23 -04:00