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Author SHA1 Message Date
f7ed465e0f Allow record_in() and record_recv() to work for transient record types.
If we have the typmod that identifies a registered record type, there's no
reason that record_in() should refuse to perform input conversion for it.
Now, in direct SQL usage, record_in() will always be passed typmod = -1
with type OID RECORDOID, because no typmodin exists for type RECORD, so the
case can't arise.  However, some InputFunctionCall users such as PLs may be
able to supply the right typmod, so we should allow this to support them.

Note: the previous coding and comment here predate commit 59c016aa9f.
There has been no case since 8.1 in which the passed type OID wouldn't be
valid; and if it weren't, this error message wouldn't be apropos anyway.
Better to let lookup_rowtype_tupdesc complain about it.

Back-patch to 9.1, as this is necessary for my upcoming plpython fix.
I'm committing it separately just to make it a bit more visible in the
commit history.
2015-08-21 11:19:44 -04:00
928d0226e5 Fix a few bogus statement type names in plpgsql error messages.
plpgsql's error location context messages ("PL/pgSQL function fn-name line
line-no at stmt-type") would misreport a CONTINUE statement as being an
EXIT, and misreport a MOVE statement as being a FETCH.  These are clear
bugs that have been there a long time, so back-patch to all supported
branches.

In addition, in 9.5 and HEAD, change the description of EXECUTE from
"EXECUTE statement" to just plain EXECUTE; there seems no good reason why
this statement type should be described differently from others that have
a well-defined head keyword.  And distinguish GET STACKED DIAGNOSTICS from
plain GET DIAGNOSTICS.  These are a bit more of a judgment call, and also
affect existing regression-test outputs, so I did not back-patch into
stable branches.

Pavel Stehule and Tom Lane
2015-08-18 19:22:38 -04:00
d509560d1f Add docs about postgres_fdw's setting of search_path and other GUCs.
This behavior wasn't documented, but it should be because it's user-visible
in triggers and other functions executed on the remote server.
Per question from Adam Fuchs.

Back-patch to 9.3 where postgres_fdw was added.
2015-08-15 14:31:18 -04:00
ff2ee45f2f Improve documentation about MVCC-unsafe utility commands.
The table-rewriting forms of ALTER TABLE are MVCC-unsafe, in much the same
way as TRUNCATE, because they replace all rows of the table with newly-made
rows with a new xmin.  (Ideally, concurrent transactions with old snapshots
would continue to see the old table contents, but the data is not there
anymore --- and if it were there, it would be inconsistent with the table's
updated rowtype, so there would be serious implementation problems to fix.)
This was nowhere documented though, and the problem was only documented for
TRUNCATE in a note in the TRUNCATE reference page.  Create a new "Caveats"
section in the MVCC chapter that can be home to this and other limitations
on serializable consistency.

In passing, fix a mistaken statement that VACUUM and CLUSTER would reclaim
space occupied by a dropped column.  They don't reconstruct existing tuples
so they couldn't do that.

Back-patch to all supported branches.
2015-08-15 13:30:16 -04:00
c9b727310b Don't use 'bool' as a struct member name in help_config.c.
Doing so doesn't work if bool is a macro rather than a typedef.

Although c.h spends some effort to support configurations where bool is
a preexisting macro, help_config.c has existed this way since
2003 (b700a6), and there have not been any reports of
problems. Backpatch anyway since this is as riskless as it gets.

Discussion: 20150812084351.GD8470@awork2.anarazel.de
Backpatch: 9.0-master
2015-08-15 16:44:33 +02:00
2360f01efa Use the correct type for TableInfo->relreplident.
Mistakenly relreplident was stored as a bool. That works today as c.h
typedefs bool to a char, but isn't very future proof.

Discussion: 20150812084351.GD8470@awork2.anarazel.de
Backpatch: 9.4 where replica identity was introduced.
2015-08-15 16:19:26 +02:00
a0104e0807 Encoding PG_UHC is code page 949.
This fixes presentation of non-ASCII messages to the Windows event log
and console in rare cases involving Korean locale.  Processes like the
postmaster and checkpointer, but not processes attached to databases,
were affected.  Back-patch to 9.4, where MessageEncoding was introduced.
The problem exists in all supported versions, but this change has no
effect in the absence of the code recognizing PG_UHC MessageEncoding.

Noticed while investigating bug #13427 from Dmitri Bourlatchkov.
2015-08-14 20:23:42 -04:00
f988da9539 Restore old pgwin32_message_to_UTF16() behavior outside transactions.
Commit 49c817eab7 replaced with a hard
error the dubious pg_do_encoding_conversion() behavior when outside a
transaction.  Reintroduce the historic soft failure locally within
pgwin32_message_to_UTF16().  This fixes errors when writing messages in
less-common encodings to the Windows event log or console.  Back-patch
to 9.4, where the aforementioned commit first appeared.

Per bug #13427 from Dmitri Bourlatchkov.
2015-08-14 20:23:41 -04:00
3bfd401808 Improve regression test case to avoid depending on system catalog stats.
In commit 95f4e59c32 I added a regression test case that examined
the plan of a query on system catalogs.  That isn't a terribly great idea
because the catalogs tend to change from version to version, or even
within a version if someone makes an unrelated regression-test change that
populates the catalogs a bit differently.  Usually I try to make planner
test cases rely on test tables that have not changed since Berkeley days,
but I got sloppy in this case because the submitted crasher example queried
the catalogs and I didn't spend enough time on rewriting it.  But it was a
problem waiting to happen, as I was rudely reminded when I tried to port
that patch into Salesforce's Postgres variant :-(.  So spend a little more
effort and rewrite the query to not use any system catalogs.  I verified
that this version still provokes the Assert if 95f4e59c32866716's code fix
is reverted.

I also removed the EXPLAIN output from the test, as it turns out that the
assertion occurs while considering a plan that isn't the one ultimately
selected anyway; so there's no value in risking any cross-platform
variation in that printout.

Back-patch to 9.2, like the previous patch.
2015-08-13 13:25:01 -04:00
83fd92290a Fix declaration of isarray variable.
Found and fixed by Andres Freund.
2015-08-13 13:25:27 +02:00
8cd3a7adab Undo mistaken tightening in join_is_legal().
One of the changes I made in commit 8703059c6b turns out not to have
been such a good idea: we still need the exception in join_is_legal() that
allows a join if both inputs already overlap the RHS of the special join
we're checking.  Otherwise we can miss valid plans, and might indeed fail
to find a plan at all, as in recent report from Andreas Seltenreich.

That code was added way back in commit c17117649b, but I failed to
include a regression test case then; my bad.  Put it back with a better
explanation, and a test this time.  The logic does end up a bit different
than before though: I now believe it's appropriate to make this check
first, thereby allowing such a case whether or not we'd consider the
previous SJ(s) to commute with this one.  (Presumably, we already decided
they did; but it was confusing to have this consideration in the middle
of the code that was handling the other case.)

Back-patch to all active branches, like the previous patch.
2015-08-12 21:19:05 -04:00
157d40640c This routine was calling ecpg_alloc to allocate to memory but did not
actually check the returned pointer allocated, potentially NULL which
could be the result of a malloc call.

Issue noted by Coverity, fixed by Michael Paquier <michael@otacoo.com>
2015-08-12 13:56:38 +02:00
a35a527f2d Fix some possible low-memory failures in regexp compilation.
newnfa() failed to set the regex error state when malloc() fails.
Several places in regcomp.c failed to check for an error after calling
subre().  Each of these mistakes could lead to null-pointer-dereference
crashes in memory-starved backends.

Report and patch by Andreas Seltenreich.  Back-patch to all branches.
2015-08-12 00:48:34 -04:00
e9a080d369 Minor cleanups in slot related code.
Fix a bunch of typos, and remove two superflous includes.

Author: Gurjeet Singh
Discussion: CABwTF4Wh_dBCzTU=49pFXR6coR4NW1ynb+vBqT+Po=7fuq5iCw@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: 9.4
2015-08-11 12:32:49 +02:00
3352c23a61 Fix privilege dumping from servers too old to have that type of privilege.
pg_dump produced fairly silly GRANT/REVOKE commands when dumping types from
pre-9.2 servers, and when dumping functions or procedural languages from
pre-7.3 servers.  Those server versions lack the typacl, proacl, and/or
lanacl columns respectively, and pg_dump substituted default values that
were in fact incorrect.  We ended up revoking all the owner's own
privileges for the object while granting all privileges to PUBLIC.
Of course the owner would then have those privileges again via PUBLIC, so
long as she did not try to revoke PUBLIC's privileges; which may explain
the lack of field reports.  Nonetheless this is pretty silly behavior.

The stakes were raised by my recent patch to make pg_dump dump shell types,
because 9.2 and up pg_dump would proceed to emit bogus GRANT/REVOKE
commands for a shell type if dumping from a pre-9.2 server; and the server
will not accept GRANT/REVOKE commands for a shell type.  (Perhaps it
should, but that's a topic for another day.)  So the resulting dump script
wouldn't load without errors.

The right thing to do is to act as though these objects have default
privileges (null ACL entries), which causes pg_dump to print no
GRANT/REVOKE commands at all for them.  That fixes the silly results
and also dodges the problem with shell types.

In passing, modify getProcLangs() to be less creatively different about
how to handle missing columns when dumping from older server versions.
Every other data-acquisition function in pg_dump does that by substituting
appropriate default values in the version-specific SQL commands, and I see
no reason why this one should march to its own drummer.  Its use of
"SELECT *" was likewise not conformant with anyplace else, not to mention
it's not considered good SQL style for production queries.

Back-patch to all supported versions.  Although 9.0 and 9.1 pg_dump don't
have the issue with typacl, they are more likely than newer versions to be
used to dump from ancient servers, so we ought to fix the proacl/lanacl
issues all the way back.
2015-08-10 20:10:16 -04:00
7e0add3861 Accept alternate spellings of __sparcv7 and __sparcv8.
Apparently some versions of gcc prefer __sparc_v7__ and __sparc_v8__.
Per report from Waldemar Brodkorb.
2015-08-10 17:34:51 -04:00
7371ab74fe Further mucking with PlaceHolderVar-related restrictions on join order.
Commit 85e5e222b1 turns out not to have taken
care of all cases of the partially-evaluatable-PlaceHolderVar problem found
by Andreas Seltenreich's fuzz testing.  I had set it up to check for risky
PHVs only in the event that we were making a star-schema-based exception to
the param_source_rels join ordering heuristic.  However, it turns out that
the problem can occur even in joins that satisfy the param_source_rels
heuristic, in which case allow_star_schema_join() isn't consulted.
Refactor so that we check for risky PHVs whenever the proposed join has
any remaining parameterization.

Back-patch to 9.2, like the previous patch (except for the regression test
case, which only works back to 9.3 because it uses LATERAL).

Note that this discovery implies that problems of this sort could've
occurred in 9.2 and up even before the star-schema patch; though I've not
tried to prove that experimentally.
2015-08-10 17:18:17 -04:00
d4ad167d95 Fix copy & paste mistake in pg_get_replication_slots().
XLogRecPtr was compared with InvalidTransactionId instead of
InvalidXLogRecPtr. As both are defined to the same value this doesn't
cause any actual problems, but it's still wrong.

Backpatch: 9.4-master, bug was introduced in 9.4
2015-08-10 13:28:19 +02:00
68b5c08c39 Fix typo in LDAP example
Reported by William Meitzen
2015-08-09 14:50:35 +02:00
30b4ccdab7 Further adjustments to PlaceHolderVar removal.
A new test case from Andreas Seltenreich showed that we were still a bit
confused about removing PlaceHolderVars during join removal.  Specifically,
remove_rel_from_query would remove a PHV that was used only underneath
the removable join, even if the place where it's used was the join partner
relation and not the join clause being deleted.  This would lead to a
"too late to create a new PlaceHolderInfo" error later on.  We can defend
against that by checking ph_eval_at to see if the PHV could possibly be
getting used at some partner rel.

Also improve some nearby LATERAL-related logic.  I decided that the check
on ph_lateral needed to take precedence over the check on ph_needed, in
case there's a lateral reference underneath the join being considered.
(That may be impossible, but I'm not convinced of it, and it's easy enough
to defend against the case.)  Also, I realized that remove_rel_from_query's
logic for updating LateralJoinInfos is dead code, because we don't build
those at all until after join removal.

Back-patch to 9.3.  Previous versions didn't have the LATERAL issues, of
course, and they also didn't attempt to remove PlaceHolderInfos during join
removal.  (I'm starting to wonder if changing that was really such a great
idea.)
2015-08-07 14:13:52 -04:00
e9215461d2 Fix attach-related race condition in shm_mq_send_bytes.
Spotted by Antonin Houska.
2015-08-07 10:06:29 -04:00
8c7bb02409 Fix old oversight in join removal logic.
Commit 9e7e29c75a introduced an Assert that
join removal didn't reduce the eval_at set of any PlaceHolderVar to empty.
At first glance it looks like join_is_removable ensures that's true --- but
actually, the loop in join_is_removable skips PlaceHolderVars that are not
referenced above the join due to be removed.  So, if we don't want any
empty eval_at sets, the right thing to do is to delete any now-unreferenced
PlaceHolderVars from the data structure entirely.

Per fuzz testing by Andreas Seltenreich.  Back-patch to 9.3 where the
aforesaid Assert was added.
2015-08-06 22:14:07 -04:00
d31e79415b Fix eclass_useful_for_merging to give valid results for appendrel children.
Formerly, this function would always return "true" for an appendrel child
relation, because it would think that the appendrel parent was a potential
join target for the child.  In principle that should only lead to some
inefficiency in planning, but fuzz testing by Andreas Seltenreich disclosed
that it could lead to "could not find pathkey item to sort" planner errors
in odd corner cases.  Specifically, we would think that all columns of a
child table's multicolumn index were interesting pathkeys, causing us to
generate a MergeAppend path that sorts by all the columns.  However, if any
of those columns weren't actually used above the level of the appendrel,
they would not get added to that rel's targetlist, which would result in
being unable to resolve the MergeAppend's sort keys against its targetlist
during createplan.c.

Backpatch to 9.3.  In older versions, columns of an appendrel get added
to its targetlist even if they're not mentioned above the scan level,
so that the failure doesn't occur.  It might be worth back-patching this
fix to older versions anyway, but I'll refrain for the moment.
2015-08-06 20:14:37 -04:00
7ef507ad77 Further fixes for degenerate outer join clauses.
Further testing revealed that commit f69b4b9495 was still a few
bricks shy of a load: minor tweaking of the previous test cases resulted
in the same wrong-outer-join-order problem coming back.  After study
I concluded that my previous changes in make_outerjoininfo() were just
accidentally masking the problem, and should be reverted in favor of
forcing syntactic join order whenever an upper outer join's predicate
doesn't mention a lower outer join's LHS.  This still allows the
chained-outer-joins style that is the normally optimizable case.

I also tightened things up some more in join_is_legal().  It seems to me
on review that what's really happening in the exception case where we
ignore a mismatched special join is that we're allowing the proposed join
to associate into the RHS of the outer join we're comparing it to.  As
such, we should *always* insist that the proposed join be a left join,
which eliminates a bunch of rather dubious argumentation.  The case where
we weren't enforcing that was the one that was already known buggy anyway
(it had a violatable Assert before the aforesaid commit) so it hardly
deserves a lot of deference.

Back-patch to all active branches, like the previous patch.  The added
regression test case failed in all branches back to 9.1, and I think it's
only an unrelated change in costing calculations that kept 9.0 from
choosing a broken plan.
2015-08-06 15:35:48 -04:00
e72f2115ef Fix incorrect calculation in shm_mq_receive.
If some, but not all, of the length word has already been read, and the
next attempt to read sees exactly the number of bytes needed to complete
the length word, or fewer, then we'll incorrectly read less than all of
the available data.

Antonin Houska
2015-08-06 13:36:10 -04:00
543e2057fb Fix make installcheck for serializable transactions.
Commit e5550d5fec added some new
tests for ALTER TABLE which involved table scans.  When
default_transaction_isolation = 'serializable' these acquire
relation-level SIReadLocks.  The test results didn't cope with
that.  Add SIReadLock as the minimum lock level for purposes of
these tests.

This could also be fixed by excluding this type of lock from the
my_locks view, but it would be a bug for SIReadLock to show up for
a relation which was not otherwise locked, so do it this way to
allow that sort of condition to cause a regression test failure.

There is some question whether we could avoid taking SIReadLocks
during these operations, but confirming the safety of that and
figuring out how to avoid the locks is not trivial, and would be
a separate patch.

Backpatch to 9.4 where the new tests were added.
2015-08-06 10:35:19 -05:00
4d94b5f1f0 Make real sure we don't reassociate joins into or out of SEMI/ANTI joins.
Per the discussion in optimizer/README, it's unsafe to reassociate anything
into or out of the RHS of a SEMI or ANTI join.  An example from Piotr
Stefaniak showed that join_is_legal() wasn't sufficiently enforcing this
rule, so lock it down a little harder.

I couldn't find a reasonably simple example of the optimizer trying to
do this, so no new regression test.  (Piotr's example involved the random
search in GEQO accidentally trying an invalid case and triggering a sanity
check way downstream in clause selectivity estimation, which did not seem
like a sequence of events that would be useful to memorialize in a
regression test as-is.)

Back-patch to all active branches.
2015-08-05 14:39:07 -04:00
aa9f8cb131 Docs: add an explicit example about controlling overall greediness of REs.
Per discussion of bug #13538.
2015-08-04 21:09:28 -04:00
fa6e785fd3 Fix pg_dump to dump shell types.
Per discussion, it really ought to do this.  The original choice to
exclude shell types was probably made in the dark ages before we made
it harder to accidentally create shell types; but that was in 7.3.

Also, cause the standard regression tests to leave a shell type behind,
for convenience in testing the case in pg_dump and pg_upgrade.

Back-patch to all supported branches.
2015-08-04 19:34:12 -04:00
118c9bb8d1 Fix bogus "out of memory" reports in tuplestore.c.
The tuplesort/tuplestore memory management logic assumed that the chunk
allocation overhead for its memtuples array could not increase when
increasing the array size.  This is and always was true for tuplesort,
but we (I, I think) blindly copied that logic into tuplestore.c without
noticing that the assumption failed to hold for the much smaller array
elements used by tuplestore.  Given rather small work_mem, this could
result in an improper complaint about "unexpected out-of-memory situation",
as reported by Brent DeSpain in bug #13530.

The easiest way to fix this is just to increase tuplestore's initial
array size so that the assumption holds.  Rather than relying on magic
constants, though, let's export a #define from aset.c that represents
the safe allocation threshold, and make tuplestore's calculation depend
on that.

Do the same in tuplesort.c to keep the logic looking parallel, even though
tuplesort.c isn't actually at risk at present.  This will keep us from
breaking it if we ever muck with the allocation parameters in aset.c.

Back-patch to all supported versions.  The error message doesn't occur
pre-9.3, not so much because the problem can't happen as because the
pre-9.3 tuplestore code neglected to check for it.  (The chance of
trouble is a great deal larger as of 9.3, though, due to changes in the
array-size-increasing strategy.)  However, allowing LACKMEM() to become
true unexpectedly could still result in less-than-desirable behavior,
so let's patch it all the way back.
2015-08-04 18:18:46 -04:00
b58e8caf0c Fix a PlaceHolderVar-related oversight in star-schema planning patch.
In commit b514a7460d, I changed the planner
so that it would allow nestloop paths to remain partially parameterized,
ie the inner relation might need parameters from both the current outer
relation and some upper-level outer relation.  That's fine so long as we're
talking about distinct parameters; but the patch also allowed creation of
nestloop paths for cases where the inner relation's parameter was a
PlaceHolderVar whose eval_at set included the current outer relation and
some upper-level one.  That does *not* work.

In principle we could allow such a PlaceHolderVar to be evaluated at the
lower join node using values passed down from the upper relation along with
values from the join's own outer relation.  However, nodeNestloop.c only
supports simple Vars not arbitrary expressions as nestloop parameters.
createplan.c is also a few bricks shy of being able to handle such cases;
it misplaces the PlaceHolderVar parameters in the plan tree, which is why
the visible symptoms of this bug are "plan should not reference subplan's
variable" and "failed to assign all NestLoopParams to plan nodes" planner
errors.

Adding the necessary complexity to make this work doesn't seem like it
would be repaid in significantly better plans, because in cases where such
a PHV exists, there is probably a corresponding join order constraint that
would allow a good plan to be found without using the star-schema exception.
Furthermore, adding complexity to nodeNestloop.c would create a run-time
penalty even for plans where this whole consideration is irrelevant.
So let's just reject such paths instead.

Per fuzz testing by Andreas Seltenreich; the added regression test is based
on his example query.  Back-patch to 9.2, like the previous patch.
2015-08-04 14:55:53 -04:00
3a35ca5add Cap wal_buffers to avoid a server crash when it's set very large.
It must be possible to multiply wal_buffers by XLOG_BLCKSZ without
overflowing int, or calculations in StartupXLOG will go badly wrong
and crash the server.  Avoid that by imposing a maximum value on
wal_buffers.  This will be just under 2GB, assuming the usual value
for XLOG_BLCKSZ.

Josh Berkus, per an analysis by Andrew Gierth.
2015-08-04 13:05:48 -04:00
4424356c03 contrib/isn now needs a .gitignore file.
Oversight in commit cb3384a0cb.
Back-patch to 9.1, like that commit.
2015-08-02 23:57:47 -04:00
d7d4bd2c3b Fix output of ISBN-13 numbers beginning with 979.
An EAN beginning with 979 (but not 9790 - those are ISMN's) are accepted
as ISBN numbers, but they cannot be represented in the old, 10-digit ISBN
format. They must be output in the new 13-digit ISBN-13 format. We printed
out an incorrect value for those.

Also add a regression test, to test this and some other basic functionality
of the module.

Patch by Fabien Coelho. This fixes bug #13442, reported by B.Z. Backpatch
to 9.1, where we started to recognize ISBN-13 numbers.
2015-08-02 22:12:41 +03:00
c6d901292f Fix incorrect order of lock file removal and failure to close() sockets.
Commit c9b0cbe98b accidentally broke the
order of operations during postmaster shutdown: it resulted in removing
the per-socket lockfiles after, not before, postmaster.pid.  This creates
a race-condition hazard for a new postmaster that's started immediately
after observing that postmaster.pid has disappeared; if it sees the
socket lockfile still present, it will quite properly refuse to start.
This error appears to be the explanation for at least some of the
intermittent buildfarm failures we've seen in the pg_upgrade test.

Another problem, which has been there all along, is that the postmaster
has never bothered to close() its listen sockets, but has just allowed them
to close at process death.  This creates a different race condition for an
incoming postmaster: it might be unable to bind to the desired listen
address because the old postmaster is still incumbent.  This might explain
some odd failures we've seen in the past, too.  (Note: this is not related
to the fact that individual backends don't close their client communication
sockets.  That behavior is intentional and is not changed by this patch.)

Fix by adding an on_proc_exit function that closes the postmaster's ports
explicitly, and (in 9.3 and up) reshuffling the responsibility for where
to unlink the Unix socket files.  Lock file unlinking can stay where it
is, but teach it to unlink the lock files in reverse order of creation.
2015-08-02 14:55:05 -04:00
bab9599069 Fix race condition that lead to WALInsertLock deadlock with commit_delay.
If a call to WaitForXLogInsertionsToFinish() returned a value in the middle
of a page, and another backend then started to insert a record to the same
page, and then you called WaitXLogInsertionsToFinish() again, the second
call might return a smaller value than the first call. The problem was in
GetXLogBuffer(), which always updated the insertingAt value to the
beginning of the requested page, not the actual requested location. Because
of that, the second call might return a xlog pointer to the beginning of
the page, while the first one returned a later position on the same page.
XLogFlush() performs two calls to WaitXLogInsertionsToFinish() in
succession, and holds WALWriteLock on the second call, which can deadlock
if the second call to WaitXLogInsertionsToFinish() blocks.

Reported by Spiros Ioannou. Backpatch to 9.4, where the more scalable
WALInsertLock mechanism, and this bug, was introduced.
2015-08-02 20:09:05 +03:00
e39a3b2efe Fix some planner issues with degenerate outer join clauses.
An outer join clause that didn't actually reference the RHS (perhaps only
after constant-folding) could confuse the join order enforcement logic,
leading to wrong query results.  Also, nested occurrences of such things
could trigger an Assertion that on reflection seems incorrect.

Per fuzz testing by Andreas Seltenreich.  The practical use of such cases
seems thin enough that it's not too surprising we've not heard field
reports about it.

This has been broken for a long time, so back-patch to all active branches.
2015-08-01 20:57:41 -04:00
216977a7d9 Fix an oversight in checking whether a join with LATERAL refs is legal.
In many cases, we can implement a semijoin as a plain innerjoin by first
passing the righthand-side relation through a unique-ification step.
However, one of the cases where this does NOT work is where the RHS has
a LATERAL reference to the LHS; that makes the RHS dependent on the LHS
so that unique-ification is meaningless.  joinpath.c understood this,
and so would not generate any join paths of this kind ... but join_is_legal
neglected to check for the case, so it would think that we could do it.
The upshot would be a "could not devise a query plan for the given query"
failure once we had failed to generate any join paths at all for the bogus
join pair.

Back-patch to 9.3 where LATERAL was added.
2015-07-31 19:26:33 -04:00
0efa0f62d2 Consolidate makefile code for setting top_srcdir, srcdir and VPATH.
Responsibility was formerly split between Makefile.global and pgxs.mk.
As a result of commit b58233c71b, in the
PGXS case, these variables were unset while parsing Makefile.global and
callees.  Inclusion of Makefile.custom did not work from PGXS, and the
subtle difference seemed like a recipe for future bugs.  Back-patch to
9.4, where that commit first appeared.
2015-07-30 20:49:22 -04:00
3b4a9dbfa5 Avoid some zero-divide hazards in the planner.
Although I think on all modern machines floating division by zero
results in Infinity not SIGFPE, we still don't want infinities
running around in the planner's costing estimates; too much risk
of that leading to insane behavior.

grouping_planner() failed to consider the possibility that final_rel
might be known dummy and hence have zero rowcount.  (I wonder if it
would be better to set a rows estimate of 1 for dummy relations?
But at least in the back branches, changing this convention seems
like a bad idea, so I'll leave that for another day.)

Make certain that get_variable_numdistinct() produces a nonzero result.
The case that can be shown to be broken is with stadistinct < 0.0 and
small ntuples; we did not prevent the result from rounding to zero.
For good luck I applied clamp_row_est() to all the nonconstant return
values.

In ExecChooseHashTableSize(), Assert that we compute positive nbuckets
and nbatch.  I know of no reason to think this isn't the case, but it
seems like a good safety check.

Per reports from Piotr Stefaniak.  Back-patch to all active branches.
2015-07-30 12:11:23 -04:00
76cf5f1956 Blacklist xlc 32-bit inlining.
Per a suggestion from Tom Lane.  Back-patch to 9.0 (all supported
versions).  While only 9.4 and up have code known to elicit this
compiler bug, we were disabling inlining by accident until commit
43d89a23d5.
2015-07-29 22:53:09 -04:00
0f272b8b4c Update our documentation concerning where to create data directories.
Although initdb has long discouraged use of a filesystem mount-point
directory as a PG data directory, this point was covered nowhere in the
user-facing documentation.  Also, with the popularity of pg_upgrade,
we really need to recommend that the PG user own not only the data
directory but its parent directory too.  (Without a writable parent
directory, operations such as "mv data data.old" fail immediately.
pg_upgrade itself doesn't do that, but wrapper scripts for it often do.)

Hence, adjust the "Creating a Database Cluster" section to address
these points.  I also took the liberty of wordsmithing the discussion
of NFS a bit.

These considerations aren't by any means new, so back-patch to all
supported branches.
2015-07-28 18:42:59 -04:00
082d4283b0 Reduce chatter from signaling of autovacuum workers.
Don't print a WARNING if we get ESRCH from a kill() that's attempting
to cancel an autovacuum worker.  It's possible (and has been seen in the
buildfarm) that the worker is already gone by the time we are able to
execute the kill, in which case the failure is harmless.  About the only
plausible reason for reporting such cases would be to help debug corrupted
lock table contents, but this is hardly likely to be the most important
symptom if that happens.  Moreover issuing a WARNING might scare users
more than is warranted.

Also, since sending a signal to an autovacuum worker is now entirely a
routine thing, and the worker will log the query cancel on its end anyway,
reduce the message saying we're doing that from LOG to DEBUG1 level.

Very minor cosmetic cleanup as well.

Since the main practical reason for doing this is to avoid unnecessary
buildfarm failures, back-patch to all active branches.
2015-07-28 17:34:00 -04:00
ab60847822 Disable ssl renegotiation by default.
While postgres' use of SSL renegotiation is a good idea in theory, it
turned out to not work well in practice. The specification and openssl's
implementation of it have lead to several security issues. Postgres' use
of renegotiation also had its share of bugs.

Additionally OpenSSL has a bunch of bugs around renegotiation, reported
and open for years, that regularly lead to connections breaking with
obscure error messages. We tried increasingly complex workarounds to get
around these bugs, but we didn't find anything complete.

Since these connection breakages often lead to hard to debug problems,
e.g. spuriously failing base backups and significant latency spikes when
synchronous replication is used, we have decided to change the default
setting for ssl renegotiation to 0 (disabled) in the released
backbranches and remove it entirely in 9.5 and master..

Author: Michael Paquier, with changes by me
Discussion: 20150624144148.GQ4797@alap3.anarazel.de
Backpatch: 9.0-9.4; 9.5 and master get a different patch
2015-07-28 22:06:31 +02:00
450bf0ba53 Make tap tests store postmaster logs and handle vpaths correctly
Given this it is possible that the buildfarm animals running these tests
will be able to capture adequate logging to allow diagnosis of failures.
2015-07-28 16:04:54 -04:00
d20f7d5c37 Remove an unsafe Assert, and explain join_clause_is_movable_into() better.
join_clause_is_movable_into() is approximate, in the sense that it might
sometimes return "false" when actually it would be valid to push the given
join clause down to the specified level.  This is okay ... but there was
an Assert in get_joinrel_parampathinfo() that's only safe if the answers
are always exact.  Comment out the Assert, and add a bunch of commentary
to clarify what's going on.

Per fuzz testing by Andreas Seltenreich.  The added regression test is
a pretty silly query, but it's based on his crasher example.

Back-patch to 9.2 where the faulty logic was introduced.
2015-07-28 13:21:14 -04:00
ef57b982d5 Improve logging of TAP tests.
Create a log file for each test run. Stdout and stderr of the test script,
as well as any subprocesses run as part of the test, are redirected to
the log file. This makes it a lot easier to debug test failures. Also print
the test output (ok 12 - ... messages) to the log file, and the command
line of any external programs executed with the system_or_bail and run_log
functions. This makes it a lot easier to debug failing tests.

Modify some of the pg_ctl and other command invocations to not use 'silent'
or 'quiet' options, and don't redirect output to /dev/null, so that you get
all the information in the log instead.

In the passing, construct some command lines in a way that works if $tempdir
contains quote-characters. I haven't systematically gone through all of
them or tested that, so I don't know if this is enough to make that work.

pg_rewind tests had a custom mechanism for creating a similar log file. Use
the new generic facility instead.

Michael Paquier and Heikki Linnakangas.

This os a backpatch of Heikki's commit
1ea06203b8 modified by me to suit 9.4
2015-07-28 13:15:03 -04:00
0e98ad0915 Don't assume that PageIsEmpty() returns true on an all-zeros page.
It does currently, and I don't see us changing that any time soon, but we
don't make that assumption anywhere else.

Per Tom Lane's suggestion. Backpatch to 9.2, like the previous patch that
added this assumption.
2015-07-27 18:54:30 +03:00
746e7f1c18 Reuse all-zero pages in GIN.
In GIN, an all-zeros page would be leaked forever, and never reused. Just
add them to the FSM in vacuum, and they will be reinitialized when grabbed
from the FSM. On master and 9.5, attempting to access the page's opaque
struct also caused an assertion failure, although that was otherwise
harmless.

Reported by Jeff Janes. Backpatch to all supported versions.
2015-07-27 12:32:08 +03:00
579b9f97ce Fix handling of all-zero pages in SP-GiST vacuum.
SP-GiST initialized an all-zeros page at vacuum, but that was not
WAL-logged, which is not safe. You might get a torn page write, when it gets
flushed to disk, and end-up with a half-initialized index page. To fix,
leave it in the all-zeros state, and add it to the FSM. It will be
initialized when reused. Also don't set the page-deleted flag when recycling
an empty page. That was also not WAL-logged, and a torn write of that would
cause the page to have an invalid checksum.

Backpatch to 9.2, where SP-GiST indexes were added.
2015-07-27 12:32:08 +03:00