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29477 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
1bd148c6aa Fix old visibility bug in HeapTupleSatisfiesDirty
If a tuple is locked but not updated by a concurrent transaction,
HeapTupleSatisfiesDirty would return that transaction's Xid in xmax,
causing callers to wait on it, when it is not necessary (in fact, if the
other transaction had used a multixact instead of a plain Xid to mark
the tuple, HeapTupleSatisfiesDirty would have behave differently and
*not* returned the Xmax).

This bug was introduced in commit 3f7fbf85dc, dated December 1998,
so it's almost 15 years old now.  However, it's hard to see this
misbehave, because before we had NOWAIT the only consequence of this is
that transactions would wait for slightly more time than necessary; so
it's not surprising that this hasn't been reported yet.

Craig Ringer and Andres Freund
2013-08-02 17:07:32 -04:00
b2bdb7b76f Fix regexp_matches() handling of zero-length matches.
We'd find the same match twice if it was of zero length and not immediately
adjacent to the previous match.  replace_text_regexp() got similar cases
right, so adjust this search logic to match that.  Note that even though
the regexp_split_to_xxx() functions share this code, they did not display
equivalent misbehavior, because the second match would be considered
degenerate and ignored.

Jeevan Chalke, with some cosmetic changes by me.
2013-07-31 11:31:40 -04:00
21c2d4cd62 Fix contrib/cube and contrib/seg to build with bison 3.0.
These modules used the YYPARSE_PARAM macro, which has been deprecated
by the bison folk since 1.875, and which they finally removed in 3.0.
Adjust the code to use the replacement facility, %parse-param, which
is a much better solution anyway since it allows specification of the
type of the extra parser parameter.  We can thus get rid of a lot of
unsightly casting.

Back-patch to all active branches, since somebody might try to build
a back branch with up-to-date tools.
2013-07-29 10:42:55 -04:00
0766904ada Fix booltestsel() for case where we have NULL stats but not MCV stats.
In a boolean column that contains mostly nulls, ANALYZE might not find
enough non-null values to populate the most-common-values stats,
but it would still create a pg_statistic entry with stanullfrac set.
The logic in booltestsel() for this situation did the wrong thing for
"col IS NOT TRUE" and "col IS NOT FALSE" tests, forgetting that null
values would satisfy these tests (so that the true selectivity would
be close to one, not close to zero).  Per bug #8274.

Fix by Andrew Gierth, some comment-smithing by me.
2013-07-24 00:45:15 -04:00
0883c85334 Check for NULL result from strdup
Per Coverity Scan
2013-07-23 17:38:31 -04:00
a8d59a9e68 Change post-rewriter representation of dropped columns in joinaliasvars.
It's possible to drop a column from an input table of a JOIN clause in a
view, if that column is nowhere actually referenced in the view.  But it
will still be there in the JOIN clause's joinaliasvars list.  We used to
replace such entries with NULL Const nodes, which is handy for generation
of RowExpr expansion of a whole-row reference to the view.  The trouble
with that is that it can't be distinguished from the situation after
subquery pull-up of a constant subquery output expression below the JOIN.
Instead, replace such joinaliasvars with null pointers (empty expression
trees), which can't be confused with pulled-up expressions.  expandRTE()
still emits the old convention, though, for convenience of RowExpr
generation and to reduce the risk of breaking extension code.

In HEAD and 9.3, this patch also fixes a problem with some new code in
ruleutils.c that was failing to cope with implicitly-casted joinaliasvars
entries, as per recent report from Feike Steenbergen.  That oversight was
because of an inadequate description of the data structure in parsenodes.h,
which I've now corrected.  There were some pre-existing oversights of the
same ilk elsewhere, which I believe are now all fixed.
2013-07-23 16:23:19 -04:00
3b35f1caa7 doc: Fix typos in conversion names.
David Christensen
2013-07-19 10:54:43 -04:00
d29130bd0f Initialize day of year value.
There are cases where the day of year value in struct tm is used, but it never
got calculated. Problem found by Coverity scan.
2013-07-19 09:04:39 +02:00
57ddea3a27 Fix regex match failures for backrefs combined with non-greedy quantifiers.
An ancient logic error in cfindloop() could cause the regex engine to fail
to find matches that begin later than the start of the string.  This
function is only used when the regex pattern contains a back reference,
and so far as we can tell the error is only reachable if the pattern is
non-greedy (i.e. its first quantifier uses the ? modifier).  Furthermore,
the actual match must begin after some potential match that satisfies the
DFA but then fails the back-reference's match test.

Reported and fixed by Jeevan Chalke, with cosmetic adjustments by me.
2013-07-18 21:23:04 -04:00
4285fb9ff5 Ensure 64bit arithmetic when calculating tapeSpace
In tuplesort.c:inittapes(), we calculate tapeSpace by first figuring
out how many 'tapes' we can use (maxTapes) and then multiplying the
result by the tape buffer overhead for each.  Unfortunately, when
we are on a system with an 8-byte long, we allow work_mem to be
larger than 2GB and that allows maxTapes to be large enough that the
32bit arithmetic can overflow when multiplied against the buffer
overhead.

When this overflow happens, we end up adding the overflow to the
amount of space available, causing the amount of memory allocated to
be larger than work_mem.

Note that to reach this point, you have to set work mem to at least
24GB and be sorting a set which is at least that size.  Given that a
user who can set work_mem to 24GB could also set it even higher, if
they were looking to run the system out of memory, this isn't
considered a security issue.

This overflow risk was found by the Coverity scanner.

Back-patch to all supported branches, as this issue has existed
since before 8.4.
2013-07-14 16:44:49 -04:00
636c55b2ec Also escape double quotes for ECPG's #line statement. 2013-07-06 22:12:52 +02:00
434943d576 Applied patch by MauMau <maumau307@gmail.com> to escape filenames in #line statements. 2013-07-05 11:15:42 +02:00
e9ac1b8775 Mention extra_float_digits in floating point docs
Make it easier for readers of the FP docs to find out about possibly
truncated values.

Per complaint from Tom Duffey in message
F0E0F874-C86F-48D1-AA2A-0C5365BF5118@trillitech.com

Author: Albe Laurenz
Reviewed by: Abhijit Menon-Sen
2013-07-02 13:14:02 -04:00
17abf275f0 Mark index-constraint comments with correct dependency in pg_dump.
When there's a comment on an index that was created with UNIQUE or PRIMARY
KEY constraint syntax, we need to label the comment as depending on the
constraint not the index, since only the constraint object actually appears
in the dump.  This incorrect dependency can lead to parallel pg_restore
trying to restore the comment before the index has been created, per bug
#8257 from Lloyd Albin.

This patch fixes pg_dump to produce the right dependency in dumps made
in the future.  Usually we also try to hack pg_restore to work around
bogus dependencies, so that existing (wrong) dumps can still be restored in
parallel mode; but that doesn't seem practical here since there's no easy
way to relate the constraint dump entry to the comment after the fact.

Andres Freund
2013-06-27 13:55:15 -04:00
158e3199ef Expect EWOULDBLOCK from a non-blocking connect() call only on Windows.
On Unix-ish platforms, EWOULDBLOCK may be the same as EAGAIN, which is
*not* a success return, at least not on Linux.  We need to treat it as a
failure to avoid giving a misleading error message.  Per the Single Unix
Spec, only EINPROGRESS and EINTR returns indicate that the connection
attempt is in progress.

On Windows, on the other hand, EWOULDBLOCK (WSAEWOULDBLOCK) is the expected
case.  We must accept EINPROGRESS as well because Cygwin will return that,
and it doesn't seem worth distinguishing Cygwin from native Windows here.
It's not very clear whether EINTR can occur on Windows, but let's leave
that part of the logic alone in the absence of concrete trouble reports.

Also, remove the test for errno == 0, effectively reverting commit
da9501bddb, which AFAICS was just a thinko;
or at best it might have been a workaround for a platform-specific bug,
which we can hope is gone now thirteen years later.  In any case, since
libpq makes no effort to reset errno to zero before calling connect(),
it seems unlikely that that test has ever reliably done anything useful.

Andres Freund and Tom Lane
2013-06-27 12:37:50 -04:00
57a2155ebb Tweak wording in sequence-function docs to avoid PDF build failures.
Adjust the wording in the first para of "Sequence Manipulation Functions"
so that neither of the link phrases in it break across line boundaries,
in either A4- or US-page-size PDF output.  This fixes a reported build
failure for the 9.3beta2 A4 PDF docs, and future-proofs this particular
para against causing similar problems in future.  (Perhaps somebody will
fix this issue in the SGML/TeX documentation tool chain someday, but I'm
not holding my breath.)

Back-patch to all supported branches, since the same problem could rise up
to bite us in future updates if anyone changes anything earlier than this
in func.sgml.
2013-06-27 00:28:12 -04:00
d5ce39365f Document effect of constant folding on CASE.
Back-patch to all supported versions.

Laurenz Albe
2013-06-26 19:53:33 -04:00
98be2b5611 Update CREATE FUNCTION documentation about argument names
More languages than PL/pgSQL actually support parameter names.
2013-06-19 22:33:50 -04:00
a335531ea4 Only install a portal's ResourceOwner if it actually has one.
In most scenarios a portal without a ResourceOwner is dead and not subject
to any further execution, but a portal for a cursor WITH HOLD remains in
existence with no ResourceOwner after the creating transaction is over.
In this situation, if we attempt to "execute" the portal directly to fetch
data from it, we were setting CurrentResourceOwner to NULL, leading to a
segfault if the datatype output code did anything that required a resource
owner (such as trying to fetch system catalog entries that weren't already
cached).  The case appears to be impossible to provoke with stock libpq,
but psqlODBC at least is able to cause it when working with held cursors.

Simplest fix is to just skip the assignment to CurrentResourceOwner, so
that any resources used by the data output operations will be managed by
the transaction-level resource owner instead.  For consistency I changed
all the places that install a portal's resowner as current, even though
some of them are probably not reachable with a held cursor's portal.

Per report from Joshua Berry (with thanks to Hiroshi Inoue for developing
a self-contained test case).  Back-patch to all supported versions.
2013-06-13 13:11:51 -04:00
0da76f384d Improve description of loread/lowrite.
Patch by me, reviewed by Tatsuo Ishii.
2013-06-12 12:26:17 -04:00
f5ef162dff Add description that loread()/lowrite() are corresponding to
lo_read()/lo_write() in libpq to avoid confusion.
2013-06-11 14:30:26 +09:00
7235435114 Remove unnecessary restrictions about RowExprs in transformAExprIn().
When the existing code here was written, it made sense to special-case
RowExprs because that was the only way that we could handle row comparisons
at all.  Now that we have record_eq() and arrays of composites, the generic
logic for "scalar" types will in fact work on RowExprs too, so there's no
reason to throw error for combinations of RowExprs and other ways of
forming composite values, nor to ignore the possibility of using a
ScalarArrayOpExpr.  But keep using the old logic when comparing two
RowExprs, for consistency with the main transformAExprOp() logic.  (This
allows some cases with not-quite-identical rowtypes to succeed, so we might
get push-back if we removed it.)  Per bug #8198 from Rafal Rzepecki.

Back-patch to all supported branches, since this works fine as far back as
8.4.

Rafal Rzepecki and Tom Lane
2013-06-09 18:39:47 -04:00
160f2cb4ec Don't downcase non-ascii identifier chars in multi-byte encodings.
Long-standing code has called tolower() on identifier character bytes
with the high bit set. This is clearly an error and produces junk output
when the encoding is multi-byte. This patch therefore restricts this
activity to cases where there is a character with the high bit set AND
the encoding is single-byte.

There have been numerous gripes about this, most recently from Martin
Schäfer.

Backpatch to all live releases.
2013-06-08 10:21:17 -04:00
54f68364e4 Correct the documentation of pg_rewrite.ev_attr.
It claimed the value was always zero; it is really always -1.

Per report from Hari Babu

backpatch 734fbbd1d2 to 8.4
2013-06-07 09:18:57 -05:00
60482b75bc Minor docs wordsmithing.
Swap the order of a couple of phrases to clarify what the adjective
"subsequent" applies to.

Joshua Tolley
2013-06-07 00:09:14 -04:00
5e9027bd50 Prevent pushing down WHERE clauses into unsafe UNION/INTERSECT nests.
The planner is aware that it mustn't push down upper-level quals into
subqueries if the quals reference subquery output columns that contain
set-returning functions or volatile functions, or are non-DISTINCT outputs
of a DISTINCT ON subquery.  However, it missed making this check when
there were one or more levels of UNION or INTERSECT above the dangerous
expression.  This could lead to "set-valued function called in context that
cannot accept a set" errors, as seen in bug #8213 from Eric Soroos, or to
silently wrong answers in the other cases.

To fix, refactor the checks so that we make the column-is-unsafe checks
during subquery_is_pushdown_safe(), which already has to recursively
inspect all arms of a set-operation tree.  This makes
qual_is_pushdown_safe() considerably simpler, at the cost that we will
spend some cycles checking output columns that possibly aren't referenced
in any upper qual.  But the cases where this code gets executed at all
are already nontrivial queries, so it's unlikely anybody will notice any
slowdown of planning.

This has been broken since commit 05f916e6ad,
which makes the bug over ten years old.  A bit surprising nobody noticed it
before now.
2013-06-05 23:44:24 -04:00
0ac9f9e939 Fix fd.c to preserve errno where needed.
PathNameOpenFile failed to ensure that the correct value of errno was
returned to its caller after a failure (because it incorrectly supposed
that free() can never change errno).  In some cases this would result
in a user-visible failure because an expected ENOENT errno was replaced
with something else.  Bogus EINVAL failures have been observed on OS X,
for example.

There were also a couple of places that could mangle an important value
of errno if FDDEBUG was defined.  While the usefulness of that debug
support is highly debatable, we might as well make it safe to use,
so add errno save/restore logic to the DO_DB macro.

Per bug #8167 from Nelson Minar, diagnosed by RhodiumToad.
Back-patch to all supported branches.
2013-05-16 15:05:01 -04:00
65d2b4be0c Fix handling of OID wraparound while in standalone mode.
If OID wraparound should occur while in standalone mode (unlikely but
possible), we want to advance the counter to FirstNormalObjectId not
FirstBootstrapObjectId.  Otherwise, user objects might be created with OIDs
in the system-reserved range.  That isn't immediately harmful but it poses
a risk of conflicts during future pg_upgrade operations.

Noted by Andres Freund.  Back-patch to all supported branches, since all of
them are supported sources for pg_upgrade operations.
2013-05-13 15:41:21 -04:00
79e5d72f3c Guard against input_rows == 0 in estimate_num_groups().
This case doesn't normally happen, because the planner usually clamps
all row estimates to at least one row; but I found that it can arise
when dealing with relations excluded by constraints.  Without a defense,
estimate_num_groups() can return zero, which leads to divisions by zero
inside the planner as well as assertion failures in the executor.

An alternative fix would be to change set_dummy_rel_pathlist() to make
the size estimate for a dummy relation 1 row instead of 0, but that seemed
pretty ugly; and probably someday we'll want to drop the convention that
the minimum rowcount estimate is 1 row.

Back-patch to 8.4, as the problem can be demonstrated that far back.
2013-05-10 17:15:58 -04:00
a0a98837f4 Fix pgp_pub_decrypt() so it works for secret keys with passwords.
Per report from Keith Fiske.

Marko Kreen
2013-05-10 13:07:08 -04:00
4fc423970c docs: log_line_prefix session id fix
Restore 4-byte designation for docs.  Fix 9.3 doc query to properly pad
to four digits.

Backpatch to all active branches

Per suggestions from Ian Lawrence Barwick
2013-05-04 13:15:54 -04:00
adee0d80b8 doc: fix log_line_prefix session_id %c item
Backpatch to 9.1 and earlier

Report from Ian Lawrence Barwick
2013-05-04 11:09:43 -04:00
8e85397638 Avoid deadlock between concurrent CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY commands.
There was a high probability of two or more concurrent C.I.C. commands
deadlocking just before completion, because each would wait for the others
to release their reference snapshots.  Fix by releasing the snapshot
before waiting for other snapshots to go away.

Per report from Paul Hinze.  Back-patch to all active branches.
2013-04-25 16:58:23 -04:00
eab46ee07f Fix longstanding race condition in plancache.c.
When creating or manipulating a cached plan for a transaction control
command (particularly ROLLBACK), we must not perform any catalog accesses,
since we might be in an aborted transaction.  However, plancache.c busily
saved or examined the search_path for every cached plan.  If we were
unlucky enough to do this at a moment where the path's expansion into
schema OIDs wasn't already cached, we'd do some catalog accesses; and with
some more bad luck such as an ill-timed signal arrival, that could lead to
crashes or Assert failures, as exhibited in bug #8095 from Nachiket Vaidya.
Fortunately, there's no real need to consider the search path for such
commands, so we can just skip the relevant steps when the subject statement
is a TransactionStmt.  This is somewhat related to bug #5269, though the
failure happens during initial cached-plan creation rather than
revalidation.

This bug has been there since the plan cache was invented, so back-patch
to all supported branches.
2013-04-20 16:59:41 -04:00
2534ac426d doc: Remove excessive table cell 2013-04-04 21:34:06 -04:00
759d0f19dc doc: Fix number of columns in table 2013-04-04 21:16:52 -04:00
7a30f29b05 Fix crash on compiling a regular expression with more than 32k colors.
Throw an error instead.

Backpatch to all supported branches.
2013-04-04 19:32:20 +03:00
292f7b2726 Stamp 8.4.17. REL8_4_17 2013-04-01 14:27:59 -04:00
bc0630bdd3 Update release notes for 9.2.4, 9.1.9, 9.0.13, 8.4.17.
Security: CVE-2013-1899, CVE-2013-1901
2013-04-01 14:11:34 -04:00
1c5e869107 Translation updates 2013-03-31 23:37:13 -04:00
a8e18f3bbf Translation updates 2013-03-31 14:50:55 -03:00
dd3728db28 Document encode(bytea, 'escape')'s behavior correctly.
I changed this in commit fd15dba543, but
missed the fact that the SGML documentation of the function specified
exactly what it did.  Well, one of the two places where it's specified
documented that --- probably I looked at the other place and thought
nothing needed to be done.  Sync the two places where encode() and
decode() are described.
2013-03-28 23:15:08 -04:00
619d755cdd Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2013b.
DST law changes in Chile, Haiti, Morocco, Paraguay, some Russian areas.
Historical corrections for numerous places.
2013-03-28 15:26:08 -04:00
a6bd75a127 Reset OpenSSL randomness state in each postmaster child process.
Previously, if the postmaster initialized OpenSSL's PRNG (which it will do
when ssl=on in postgresql.conf), the same pseudo-random state would be
inherited by each forked child process.  The problem is masked to a
considerable extent if the incoming connection uses SSL encryption, but
when it does not, identical pseudo-random state is made available to
functions like contrib/pgcrypto.  The process's PID does get mixed into any
requested random output, but on most systems that still only results in 32K
or so distinct random sequences available across all Postgres sessions.
This might allow an attacker who has database access to guess the results
of "secure" operations happening in another session.

To fix, forcibly reset the PRNG after fork().  Each child process that has
need for random numbers from OpenSSL's generator will thereby be forced to
go through OpenSSL's normal initialization sequence, which should provide
much greater variability of the sequences.  There are other ways we might
do this that would be slightly cheaper, but this approach seems the most
future-proof against SSL-related code changes.

This has been assigned CVE-2013-1900, but since the issue and the patch
have already been publicized on pgsql-hackers, there's no point in trying
to hide this commit.

Back-patch to all supported branches.

Marko Kreen
2013-03-27 18:50:38 -04:00
1173fa2a7e Ignore invalid indexes in pg_dump.
Dumping invalid indexes can cause problems at restore time, for example
if the reason the index creation failed was because it tried to enforce
a uniqueness condition not satisfied by the table's data.  Also, if the
index creation is in fact still in progress, it seems reasonable to
consider it to be an uncommitted DDL change, which pg_dump wouldn't be
expected to dump anyway.

Back-patch to all active versions, and teach them to ignore invalid
indexes in servers back to 8.2, where the concept was introduced.

Michael Paquier
2013-03-26 17:43:34 -04:00
f75a538c85 Update time zone abbreviation lists for changes missed since 2006.
Most (all?) of Russia has moved to what's effectively year-round daylight
savings time, so that the "standard" zone names now mean an hour later
than they used to.  Update that, notably changing MSK as per recent
complaint from Sergey Konoplev, but also CHOT, GET, IRKT, KGT, KRAT,
MAGT, NOVT, OMST, VLAT, YAKT, YEKT.  The corresponding DST abbreviations
are presumably now obsolete, but I left them in place with their old
definitions, just to reduce any possible breakage from this change.

Also add VOLT (Europe/Volgograd), which for some reason we never had
before, as well as MIST (Antarctica/Macquarie), and fix obsolete
definitions of MAWT, TKT, and WST.
2013-03-23 19:16:57 -04:00
225046199c Don't put <indexterm> before <term> in <varlistentry> items.
Doing that results in a broken index entry in PDF output.  We had only
a few like that, which is probably why nobody noticed before.
Standardize on putting the <term> first.

Josh Kupershmidt
2013-03-23 14:06:48 -04:00
8c54115cbb Improve documentation of EXTRACT(WEEK).
The docs showed that early-January dates can be considered part of the
previous year for week-counting purposes, but failed to say explicitly
that late-December dates can also be considered part of the next year.
Fix that, and add a cross-reference to the "isoyear" field.  Per bug
#7967 from Pawel Kobylak.
2013-03-18 13:34:39 -04:00
f85e3f3762 Fix infinite-loop risk in fixempties() stage of regex compilation.
The previous coding of this function could get into situations where it
would never terminate, because successive passes would re-add EMPTY arcs
that had been removed by the previous pass.  Rewrite the function
completely using a new algorithm that is guaranteed to terminate, and
also seems to be usually faster than the old one.  Per Tcl bugs 3604074
and 3606683.

Tom Lane and Don Porter
2013-03-07 11:51:25 -05:00
7140cef240 Fix to_char() to use ASCII-only case-folding rules where appropriate.
formatting.c used locale-dependent case folding rules in some code paths
where the result isn't supposed to be locale-dependent, for example
to_char(timestamp, 'DAY').  Since the source data is always just ASCII
in these cases, that usually didn't matter ... but it does matter in
Turkish locales, which have unusual treatment of "i" and "I".  To confuse
matters even more, the misbehavior was only visible in UTF8 encoding,
because in single-byte encodings we used pg_toupper/pg_tolower which
don't have locale-specific behavior for ASCII characters.  Fix by providing
intentionally ASCII-only case-folding functions and using these where
appropriate.  Per bug #7913 from Adnan Dursun.  Back-patch to all active
branches, since it's been like this for a long time.
2013-03-05 13:02:46 -05:00