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15448 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane
40d7f86074 Fix check_sql_fn_retval to allow the case where a SQL function declared to
return void ends with a SELECT, if that SELECT has a single result that is
also of type void.  Without this, it's hard to write a void function that
calls another void function.  Per gripe from Peter.

Back-patch as far as 8.0.
2007-04-02 18:49:41 +00:00
Tom Lane
b190aae9ad Fix typo, ensable -> enable, per Steve Gieseking. 2007-03-27 03:25:43 +00:00
Tatsuo Ishii
96283327f3 Fix pg_wchar_table's maxmblen field of EUC_CN, EUC_TW, MULE_INTERNAL
and GB18030. patches from ITAGAKI Takahiro.
2007-03-26 11:43:09 +00:00
Tom Lane
6c15622595 SPI_cursor_open failed to enforce that only read-only queries could be
executed in read_only mode.  This could lead to various relatively-subtle
failures, such as an allegedly stable function returning non-stable results.
Bug goes all the way back to the introduction of read-only mode in 8.0.
Per report from Gaetano Mendola.
2007-03-17 03:15:55 +00:00
Tom Lane
5f41ad2ccf Fix a longstanding bug in VACUUM FULL's handling of update chains. The code
did not expect that a DEAD tuple could follow a RECENTLY_DEAD tuple in an
update chain, but because the OldestXmin rule for determining deadness is a
simplification of reality, it is possible for this situation to occur
(implying that the RECENTLY_DEAD tuple is in fact dead to all observers,
but this patch does not attempt to exploit that).  The code would follow a
chain forward all the way, but then stop before a DEAD tuple when backing
up, meaning that not all of the chain got moved.  This could lead to copying
the chain multiple times (resulting in duplicate copies of the live tuple at
its end), or leaving dangling index entries behind (which, aside from
generating warnings from later vacuums, creates a risk of wrong query
results or bogus duplicate-key errors once the heap slot the index entry
points to is repopulated).

The fix is to recheck HeapTupleSatisfiesVacuum while following a chain
forward, and to stop if a DEAD tuple is reached.  Each contiguous group
of RECENTLY_DEAD tuples will therefore be copied as a separate chain.
The patch also adds a couple of extra sanity checks to verify correct
behavior.

Per report and test case from Pavan Deolasee.
2007-03-14 18:49:12 +00:00
Tom Lane
45ca0be21b Arrange to install a "posixrules" entry in our timezone database, so that
POSIX-style timezone specs that don't exactly match any database entry will
be treated as having correct USA DST rules.  Also, document that this can
be changed if you want to use some other DST rules with a POSIX zone spec.

We could consider changing localtime.c's TZDEFRULESTRING, but since that
facility can only deal with one DST transition rule, it seems fairly useless
now; might as well just plan to override it using a "posixrules" entry.

Backpatch as far as 8.0.  There isn't much we can do in 7.x ... either your
libc gets it right, or it doesn't.
2007-03-14 17:38:22 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera
3cda014bf4 Fix a race condition that caused pg_database_size() and pg_tablespace_size()
to fail if an object was removed between calls to ReadDir() and stat().
Per discussion in pgsql-hackers.

http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2007-03/msg00671.php

Bug report and patch by Michael Fuhr.
2007-03-11 06:43:23 +00:00
Tom Lane
15c31ce09e Fix oversight in original coding of inline_function(): since
check_sql_fn_retval allows binary-compatibility cases, the expression
extracted from an inline-able SQL function might have a type that is only
binary-compatible with the declared function result type.  To avoid possibly
changing the semantics of the expression, we should insert a RelabelType node
in such cases.  This has only been shown to have bad consequences in recent
8.1 and up releases, but I suspect there may be failure cases in the older
branches too, so patch it all the way back.  Per bug #3116 from Greg Mullane.

Along the way, fix an omission in eval_const_expressions_mutator: it failed
to copy the relabelformat field when processing a RelabelType.  No known
observable failures from this, but it definitely isn't intended behavior.
2007-03-06 22:45:29 +00:00
Tom Lane
3b14809f92 Fix markQueryForLocking() to work correctly in the presence of nested views.
It has been wrong for this case since it was first written for 7.1 :-(
Per report from Pavel Hanák.
2007-03-01 18:50:42 +00:00
Michael Meskes
e9a97570fa Backported bug fix for #2956. 2007-02-27 13:27:05 +00:00
Tom Lane
355451be0e Fix portal management code to support non-default command completion tags for
portals using PORTAL_UTIL_SELECT strategy.  This is currently significant only
for FETCH queries, which are supposed to include a count in the tag.  Seems
it's been broken since 7.4, but nobody noticed before Knut Lehre.
2007-02-18 19:49:35 +00:00
Tom Lane
0990afb8e2 Restructure code that is responsible for ensuring that clauseless joins are
considered when it is necessary to do so because of a join-order restriction
(that is, an outer-join or IN-subselect construct).  The former coding was a
bit ad-hoc and inconsistent, and it missed some cases, as exposed by Mario
Weilguni's recent bug report.  His specific problem was that an IN could be
turned into a "clauseless" join due to constant-propagation removing the IN's
joinclause, and if the IN's subselect involved more than one relation and
there was more than one such IN linking to the same upper relation, then the
only valid join orders involve "bushy" plans but we would fail to consider the
specific paths needed to get there.  (See the example case added to the join
regression test.)  On examining the code I wonder if there weren't some other
problem cases too; in particular it seems that GEQO was defending against a
different set of corner cases than the main planner was.  There was also an
efficiency problem, in that when we did realize we needed a clauseless join
because of an IN, we'd consider clauseless joins against every other relation
whether this was sensible or not.  It seems a better design is to use the
outer-join and in-clause lists as a backup heuristic, just as the rule of
joining only where there are joinclauses is a heuristic: we'll join two
relations if they have a usable joinclause *or* this might be necessary to
satisfy an outer-join or IN-clause join order restriction.  I refactored the
code to have just one place considering this instead of three, and made sure
that it covered all the cases that any of them had been considering.

Backpatch as far as 8.1 (which has only the IN-clause form of the disease).
By rights 8.0 and 7.4 should have the bug too, but they accidentally fail
to fail, because the joininfo structure used in those releases preserves some
memory of there having once been a joinclause between the inner and outer
sides of an IN, and so it leads the code in the right direction anyway.
I'll be conservative and not touch them.
2007-02-16 00:14:16 +00:00
Tom Lane
e6aa62ec14 Disallow committing a prepared transaction unless we are in the same database
it was executed in.  Someday it might be nice to allow cross-DB commits, but
work would be needed in NOTIFY and perhaps other places.  Per Heikki.
2007-02-13 19:39:55 +00:00
Magnus Hagander
b8a26a6240 Fix for early log messages during postmaster startup getting lost when
running as a service on Win32.

Per report from Harald Armin Massa.

Backpatch to 8.1.
2007-02-11 15:12:48 +00:00
Tom Lane
d6e3ae48ef Fix an ancient logic error in plpgsql's exec_stmt_block: it thought it could
get away with not (re)initializing a local variable if the variable is marked
"isconst" and not "isnull".  Unfortunately it makes this decision after having
already freed the old value, meaning that something like

   for i in 1..10 loop
     declare c constant text := 'hi there';

leads to subsequent accesses to freed memory, and hence probably crashes.
(In particular, this is why Asif Ali Rehman's bug leads to crash and not
just an unexpectedly-NULL value for SQLERRM: SQLERRM is marked CONSTANT
and so triggers this error.)

The whole thing seems wrong on its face anyway: CONSTANT means that you can't
change the variable inside the block, not that the initializer expression is
guaranteed not to change value across successive block entries.  Hence,
remove the "optimization" instead of trying to fix it.
2007-02-08 18:37:55 +00:00
Tom Lane
cd0d50466f Rearrange use of plpgsql_add_initdatums() so that only the parsing of a
DECLARE section needs to know about it.  Formerly, everyplace besides DECLARE
that created variables needed to do "plpgsql_add_initdatums(NULL)" to prevent
those variables from being sucked up as part of a subsequent DECLARE block.
This is obviously error-prone, and in fact the SQLSTATE/SQLERRM patch had
failed to do it for those two variables, leading to the bug recently exhibited
by Asif Ali Rehman: a DECLARE within an exception handler tried to reinitialize
SQLERRM.

Although the SQLSTATE/SQLERRM patch isn't in any pre-8.1 branches, and so
I can't point to a demonstrable failure there, it seems wise to back-patch
this into the older branches anyway, just to keep the logic similar to HEAD.
2007-02-08 18:37:52 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
94bf5466b0 Stamp releases 8.2.3, 8.1.8, 8.0.12. No release notes yet. 2007-02-07 03:48:38 +00:00
Tom Lane
e41cb89a03 Fix an error in the original coding of holdable cursors: PersistHoldablePortal
thought that it didn't have to reposition the underlying tuplestore if the
portal is atEnd.  But this is not so, because tuplestores have separate read
and write cursors ... and the read cursor hasn't moved from the start.
This mistake explains bug #2970 from William Zhang.

Note: the coding here is pretty inefficient, but given that no one has noticed
this bug until now, I'd say hardly anyone uses the case where the cursor has
been advanced before being persisted.  So maybe it's not worth worrying about.
2007-02-06 22:49:36 +00:00
Tom Lane
c60125a9be Remove typmod checking from the recent security-related patches. It turns
out that ExecEvalVar and friends don't necessarily have access to a tuple
descriptor with correct typmod: it definitely can contain -1, and possibly
might contain other values that are different from the Var's value.
Arguably this should be cleaned up someday, but it's not a simple change,
and in any case typmod discrepancies don't pose a security hazard.
Per reports from numerous people :-(

I'm not entirely sure whether the failure can occur in 8.0 --- the simple
test cases reported so far don't trigger it there.  But back-patch the
change all the way anyway.
2007-02-06 17:35:34 +00:00
Michael Meskes
7fd912e854 Backported va_list handling cleanup 2007-02-06 09:41:52 +00:00
Tom Lane
924c1d4ceb Stamp release 8.1.7.
Security: CVE-2007-0555, CVE-2007-0556
2007-02-02 00:14:48 +00:00
Tom Lane
1f1f5efa82 Repair failure to check that a table is still compatible with a previously
made query plan.  Use of ALTER COLUMN TYPE creates a hazard for cached
query plans: they could contain Vars that claim a column has a different
type than it now has.  Fix this by checking during plan startup that Vars
at relation scan level match the current relation tuple descriptor.  Since
at that point we already have at least AccessShareLock, we can be sure the
column type will not change underneath us later in the query.  However,
since a backend's locks do not conflict against itself, there is still a
hole for an attacker to exploit: he could try to execute ALTER COLUMN TYPE
while a query is in progress in the current backend.  Seal that hole by
rejecting ALTER TABLE whenever the target relation is already open in
the current backend.

This is a significant security hole: not only can one trivially crash the
backend, but with appropriate misuse of pass-by-reference datatypes it is
possible to read out arbitrary locations in the server process's memory,
which could allow retrieving database content the user should not be able
to see.  Our thanks to Jeff Trout for the initial report.

Security: CVE-2007-0556
2007-02-02 00:07:44 +00:00
Tom Lane
088ef257fe Repair insufficiently careful type checking for SQL-language functions:
we should check that the function code returns the claimed result datatype
every time we parse the function for execution.  Formerly, for simple
scalar result types we assumed the creation-time check was sufficient, but
this fails if the function selects from a table that's been redefined since
then, and even more obviously fails if check_function_bodies had been OFF.

This is a significant security hole: not only can one trivially crash the
backend, but with appropriate misuse of pass-by-reference datatypes it is
possible to read out arbitrary locations in the server process's memory,
which could allow retrieving database content the user should not be able
to see.  Our thanks to Jeff Trout for the initial report.

Security: CVE-2007-0555
2007-02-02 00:03:30 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut
139e4a2635 Translation updates 2007-01-31 08:27:01 +00:00
Tom Lane
6c74f05cf2 Repair oversights in the mechanism used to store compiled plpgsql functions.
The original coding failed (tried to access deallocated memory) if there were
two active call sites (fn_extra pointers) for the same function and the
function definition was updated.  Also, if an update of a recursive function
was detected upon nested entry to the function, the existing compiled version
was summarily deallocated, resulting in crash upon return to the outer
instance.  Problem observed while studying a bug report from Sergiy
Vyshnevetskiy.

Bug does not exist before 8.1 since older versions just leaked the memory of
obsoleted compiled functions, rather than trying to reclaim it.
2007-01-30 22:05:25 +00:00
Tom Lane
458e9169d6 Add SPI_push/SPI_pop calls so that datatype input and output functions called
by plpgsql can themselves use SPI --- possibly indirectly, as in the case
of domain_in() invoking plpgsql functions in a domain check constraint.
Per bug #2945 from Sergiy Vyshnevetskiy.

Somewhat arbitrarily, I've chosen to back-patch this as far as 8.0.  Given
the lack of prior complaints, it doesn't seem critical for 7.x.
2007-01-30 18:02:34 +00:00
Tom Lane
5e6c06f040 Correct an old logic error in btree page splitting: when considering a split
exactly at the point where we need to insert a new item, the calculation used
the wrong size for the "high key" of the new left page.  This could lead to
choosing an unworkable split, resulting in "PANIC: failed to add item to the
left sibling" (or "right sibling") failure.  Although this bug has been there
a long time, it's very difficult to trigger a failure before 8.2, since there
was generally a lot of free space on both sides of a chosen split.  In 8.2,
where the user-selected fill factor determines how much free space the code
tries to leave, an unworkable split is much more likely.  Report by Joe
Conway, diagnosis and fix by Heikki Linnakangas.
2007-01-27 20:53:41 +00:00
Tom Lane
722ad326f1 Back-port changes of Jan 16 and 17 to "revoke" pending fsync requests during
DROP TABLE and DROP DATABASE.  Should prevent unexpected "permission denied"
failures on Windows, and is cleaner on other platforms too since we no longer
have to take it on faith that ENOENT is okay during an fsync attempt.

Patched as far back as 8.1; per recent discussion I think we are not going
to worry about Windows-specific issues in 8.0 anymore.
2007-01-27 20:15:55 +00:00
Tom Lane
03d1281477 Get pg_utf_mblen(), pg_utf2wchar_with_len(), and utf2ucs() all on the same
page about the maximum UTF8 sequence length we support (4 bytes since 8.1,
3 before that).  pg_utf2wchar_with_len never got updated to support 4-byte
characters at all, and in any case had a buffer-overrun risk in that it
could produce multiple pg_wchars from what mblen claims to be just one UTF8
character.  The only reason we don't have a major security hole is that most
callers allocate worst-case output buffers; the sole exception in released
versions appears to be pre-8.2 iwchareq() (ie, ILIKE), which can be crashed
due to zeroing out its return address --- but AFAICS that can't be exploited
for anything more than a crash, due to inability to control what gets written
there.  Per report from James Russell and Michael Fuhr.

Pre-8.1 the risk is much less, but I still think pg_utf2wchar_with_len's
behavior given an incomplete final character risks buffer overrun, so
back-patch that logic change anyway.

This patch also makes sure that UTF8 sequences exceeding the supported
length (whichever it is) are consistently treated as error cases, rather
than being treated like a valid shorter sequence in some places.
2007-01-24 17:12:29 +00:00
Tom Lane
212df03ac9 Relax an Assert() that has been found to be too strict in some situations
involving unions of types having typmods.  Variants of the failure are known
to occur in 8.1 and up; not sure if it's possible in 8.0 and 7.4, but since
the code exists that far back, I'll just patch 'em all.  Per report from
Brian Hurt.
2007-01-24 01:25:56 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera
d8b5a71c51 Fix autovacuum to avoid leaving non-permanent Xids in non-connectable
databases.

Apply to the 8.1 branch only, as the new 8.2 (and HEAD) coding does not have
this problem.
2007-01-14 20:18:30 +00:00
Tom Lane
0069d7c36a Fix a performance problem in databases with large numbers of tables
(or other types of pg_class entry): the function pgstat_vacuum_tabstat,
invoked during VACUUM startup, had runtime proportional to the number of
stats table entries times the number of pg_class rows; in other words
O(N^2) if the stats collector's information is reasonably complete.
Replace list searching with a hash table to bring it back to O(N)
behavior.  Per report from kim at myemma.com.

Back-patch as far as 8.1; 8.0 and before use different coding here.
2007-01-11 23:06:16 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
9b9758bb77 Stamp release 8.1.6. 2007-01-05 20:53:49 +00:00
Tom Lane
15888bf0c0 Fix regex_fixed_prefix() to cope reasonably well with regex patterns of the
form '^(foo)$'.  Before, these could never be optimized into indexscans.
The recent changes to make psql and pg_dump generate such patterns (for \d
commands and -t and related switches, respectively) therefore represented
a big performance hit for people with large pg_class catalogs, as seen in
recent gripe from Erik Jones.  While at it, be more paranoid about
case-sensitivity checking in multibyte encodings, and fix some other
corner cases in which a regex might be interpreted too liberally.
2007-01-03 22:39:42 +00:00
Tom Lane
34aabc2071 Modify local buffer management to request memory for local buffers in blocks
of increasing size, instead of one at a time.  This reduces the memory
management overhead when num_temp_buffers is large: in the previous coding
we would actually waste 50% of the space used for temp buffers, because aset.c
would round the individual requests up to 16K.  Problem noted while studying
a performance issue reported by Steven Flatt.

Back-patch as far as 8.1 --- older versions used few enough local buffers
that the issue isn't significant for them.
2006-12-27 22:32:03 +00:00
Tom Lane
f1d8828e3c Repair bug #2839: the various ExecReScan functions need to reset
ps_TupFromTlist in plan nodes that make use of it.  This was being done
correctly in join nodes and Result nodes but not in any relation-scan nodes.
Bug would lead to bogus results if a set-returning function appeared in the
targetlist of a subquery that could be rescanned after partial execution,
for example a subquery within EXISTS().  Bug has been around forever :-(
... surprising it wasn't reported before.
2006-12-26 19:27:04 +00:00
Tom Lane
95f6a47f1a Update timezone data to tzdata2006p zic distribution. It seems Western
Australia decided to institute DST with one month's notice ... way to go,
politicians.
2006-11-28 19:37:13 +00:00
Tom Lane
0b11a15259 Mark to_number() and the numeric-type variants of to_char() as stable, not
immutable, because their results depend on lc_numeric; this is a longstanding
oversight.  We cannot force initdb for this in the back branches, but we can
at least provide correct catalog entries for future installations.
2006-11-28 19:18:56 +00:00
Tom Lane
583159ff69 Back-patch HEAD's fixes to recognize __ppc64__ as equivalent to __powerpc64__.
Per confirmation from Brian Wipf that this is correct and necessary for
Darwin 64-bit.
2006-11-28 05:54:32 +00:00
Tom Lane
6db9d26727 Add $(CFLAGS) to the simplified build rule for .so libraries on Darwin.
Arguably we should do this on *all* platforms, but for the moment I'll be
conservative and just do it where it's demonstrably needed.  Per report
from Brian Wipf.
2006-11-28 05:47:16 +00:00
Tom Lane
2f523a6f53 Fix psql's \copy command to ensure that it cycles libpq back to the idle state
(in particular, causing the ReadyForQuery message to be eaten) before
returning from do_copy.  The only known consequence of failing to do so is
that get_prompt might show a wrong result for the %x transaction status
escape, as reported by Bernd Helmle; but it's possible there are other issues.

Back-patch as far as 7.4, the oldest version supporting %x.
2006-11-24 23:06:56 +00:00
Tom Lane
c4950aa1ee Fix 1-byte buffer overrun when OID exceeds 1 billion. This probably can't
cause any serious harm in normal cases, but if you have gcc buffer overrun
checking turned on, that will notice.  Found by Jack Orenstein.  Problem
was already fixed in CVS HEAD.
2006-11-22 21:12:57 +00:00
Tom Lane
504d87c7cd When truncating a relation in-place (eg during VACUUM), do not try to unlink
any no-longer-needed segments; just truncate them to zero bytes and leave
the files in place for possible future re-use.  This avoids problems when
the segments are re-used due to relation growth shortly after truncation.
Before, the bgwriter, and possibly other backends, could still be holding
open file references to the old segment files, and would write dirty blocks
into those files where they'd disappear from the view of other processes.

Back-patch as far as 8.0.  I believe the 7.x branches are not vulnerable,
because they had no bgwriter, and "blind" writes by other backends would
always be done via freshly-opened file references.
2006-11-20 01:08:02 +00:00
Tom Lane
dfb25d2863 Repair problems with hash indexes that span multiple segments: the hash code's
preference for filling pages out-of-order tends to confuse the sanity checks
in md.c, as per report from Balazs Nagy in bug #2737.  The fix is to ensure
that the smgr-level code always has the same idea of the logical EOF as the
hash index code does, by using ReadBuffer(P_NEW) where we are adding a single
page to the end of the index, and using smgrextend() to reserve a large batch
of pages when creating a new splitpoint.  The patch is a bit ugly because it
avoids making any changes in md.c, which seems the most prudent approach for a
backpatchable beta-period fix.  After 8.3 development opens, I'll take a look
at a cleaner but more invasive patch, in particular getting rid of the now
unnecessary hack to allow reading beyond EOF in mdread().

Backpatch as far as 7.4.  The bug likely exists in 7.3 as well, but because
of the magnitude of the 7.3-to-7.4 changes in hash, the later-version patch
doesn't even begin to apply.  Given the other known bugs in the 7.3-era hash
code, it does not seem worth trying to develop a separate patch for 7.3.
2006-11-19 21:33:29 +00:00
Tom Lane
91eb4895bb Repair two related errors in heap_lock_tuple: it was failing to recognize
cases where we already hold the desired lock "indirectly", either via
membership in a MultiXact or because the lock was originally taken by a
different subtransaction of the current transaction.  These cases must be
accounted for to avoid needless deadlocks and/or inappropriate replacement of
an exclusive lock with a shared lock.  Per report from Clarence Gardner and
subsequent investigation.
2006-11-17 18:00:25 +00:00
Michael Meskes
a2281c8e6f Applied patch by Peter Harris to free auto_mem struct in ECPGconnect. 2006-11-08 10:48:27 +00:00
Tom Lane
b3234f2912 Repair bug #2694 concerning an ARRAY[] construct whose inputs are empty
sub-arrays.  Per discussion, if all inputs are empty arrays then result
must be an empty array too, whereas a mix of empty and nonempty arrays
should (and already did) draw an error.  In the back branches, the
construct was strict: any NULL input immediately yielded a NULL output;
so I left that behavior alone.  HEAD was simply ignoring NULL sub-arrays,
which doesn't seem very sensible.  For lack of a better idea it now
treats NULL sub-arrays the same as empty ones.
2006-11-06 18:21:38 +00:00
Tom Lane
befd4e4e48 Fix recently-identified PITR recovery hazard: the base backup could contain
stale relcache init files (pg_internal.init), and there is no mechanism for
updating them during WAL replay.  Easiest solution is just to delete the init
files at conclusion of startup, and let the first backend started in each
database take care of rebuilding the init file.  Simon Riggs and Tom Lane.

Back-patched to 8.1.  Arguably this should be fixed in 8.0 too, but it would
require significantly more code since 8.0 has no handy startup-time scan of
pg_database to piggyback on.  Manual solution of the problem is possible
in 8.0 (just delete the pg_internal.init files before starting WAL replay),
so that may be a sufficient answer.
2006-11-05 23:40:38 +00:00
Tom Lane
6f48f84874 Fix "failed to re-find parent key" btree VACUUM failure by tweaking
_bt_pagedel to recover from the failure: just search the whole parent level
if searching to the right fails.  This does nothing for the underlying problem
that index keys became out-of-order in the grandparent level.  However, we
believe that there is no other consequence worse than slightly inefficient
searching, so this narrow patch seems like the safest solution for the back
branches.
2006-11-01 19:50:03 +00:00
Tom Lane
ecaa7ebed8 pg_restore failed on tar-format archives if they contained large objects
(blobs) with comments, per bug #2727 from Konstantin Pelepelin.
Mea culpa for not having tested this case.
Back-patch to 8.1; prior branches don't dump blob comments at all.
2006-11-01 15:59:31 +00:00