Add a validity flag to DCHCacheEntry and NUMCacheEntry entries, and
do not set it true until after we've parsed the supplied format string.
This allows dealing with possible errors while parsing the format
without the baroque hack that was there before (which only covered
errors within NUMDesc_prepare, anyway). We can get rid of the PG_TRY in
NUMDesc_prepare, as well as last_NUMCacheEntry and NUM_cache_remove.
(Essentially, this reverts commit ff783fbae in favor of a less fragile
solution; the problems with that approach are well illustrated by later
hacking such as 55f927a46.)
In passing, define the size of these caches as DCH_CACHE_ENTRIES not
DCH_CACHE_FIELDS + 1 (whoever thought that was a good definition?)
and likewise for the NUM cache. Also const-ify format string parameters
where convenient, and merge duplicated cache lookup logic.
This is primarily driven by a proposed patch from Artur Zakirov,
which introduced some ereport's into format string parsing for
the datetime case. He proposed preventing the creation of invalid
cache entries by parsing the format string first into a local-variable
array, and then copying that to a cache entry. That seemed a bit
ugly to me, and anyway randomly different from the way the identical
problem had been solved for the numeric case. Let's make the two
sets of code more similar not less so.
I'm not sure whether we'll adopt the new error conditions Artur proposes,
but this patch seems like good code cleanup and future-proofing in any
case. The existing code is critically (and undocumented-ly) dependent on
no elog being thrown out of several nontrivial functions, which is trouble
waiting to happen, though it doesn't seem to be actively broken today.
Discussion: <b2a39359-3282-b402-f4a3-057aae500ee7@postgrespro.ru>
Historically, something like to_date('2009-06-40','YYYY-MM-DD') would
return '2009-07-10' because there was no prohibition on out-of-range
month or day numbers. This has been widely panned, and it also turns
out that Oracle throws an error in such cases. Since these functions
are nominally Oracle-compatibility features, let's change that.
There's no particular restriction on year (modulo the fact that the
scanner may not believe that more than 4 digits are year digits,
a matter to be addressed separately if at all). But we now check month,
day, hour, minute, second, and fractional-second fields, as well as
day-of-year and second-of-day fields if those are used.
Currently, no checks are made on ISO-8601-style week numbers or day
numbers; it's not very clear what the appropriate rules would be there,
and they're probably so little used that it's not worth sweating over.
Artur Zakirov, reviewed by Amul Sul, further adjustments by me
Discussion: <1873520224.1784572.1465833145330.JavaMail.yahoo@mail.yahoo.com>
See-Also: <57786490.9010201@wars-nicht.de>
Several places in NUM_numpart_from_char(), which is called from the SQL
function to_number(text, text), could accidentally read one byte past
the end of the input buffer (which comes from the input text datum and
is not null-terminated).
1. One leading space character would be skipped, but there was no check
that the input was at least one byte long. This does not happen in
practice, but for defensiveness, add a check anyway.
2. Commit 4a3a1e2cf apparently accidentally doubled that code that skips
one space character (so that two spaces might be skipped), but there
was no overflow check before skipping the second byte. Fix by
removing that duplicate code.
3. A logic error would allow a one-byte over-read when looking for a
trailing sign (S) placeholder.
In each case, the extra byte cannot be read out directly, but looking at
it might cause a crash.
The third item was discovered by Piotr Stefaniak, the first two were
found and analyzed by Tom Lane and Peter Eisentraut.
Mostly these are just comments but there are a few in documentation
and a handful in code and tests. Hopefully this doesn't cause too much
unnecessary pain for backpatching. I relented from some of the most
common like "thru" for that reason. The rest don't seem numerous
enough to cause problems.
Thanks to Kevin Lyda's tool https://pypi.python.org/pypi/misspellings
to_timestamp() handles the TH/th format codes by advancing over two input
characters, whatever those are. It failed to notice whether there were
two characters available to be skipped, making it possible to advance
the pointer past the end of the input string and keep on parsing.
A similar risk existed in the handling of "Y,YYY" format: it would advance
over three characters after the "," whether or not three characters were
available.
In principle this might be exploitable to disclose contents of server
memory. But the security team concluded that it would be very hard to use
that way, because the parsing loop would stop upon hitting any zero byte,
and TH/th format codes can't be consecutive --- they have to follow some
other format code, which would have to match whatever data is there.
So it seems impractical to examine memory very much beyond the end of the
input string via this bug; and the input string will always be in local
memory not in disk buffers, making it unlikely that anything very
interesting is close to it in a predictable way. So this doesn't quite
rise to the level of needing a CVE.
Thanks to Wolf Roediger for reporting this bug.
In HEAD, fix incorrect field width for hours part of OF when tm_gmtoff is
negative. This was introduced by commit 2d87eedc1d4468d3 as a result of
falsely applying a pattern that's correct when + signs are omitted, which
is not the case for OF.
In 9.4, fix missing abs() call that allowed a sign to be attached to the
minutes part of OF. This was fixed in 9.5 by 9b43d73b3f9bef27, but for
inscrutable reasons not back-patched.
In all three versions, ensure that the sign of tm_gmtoff is correctly
reported even when the GMT offset is less than 1 hour.
Add regression tests, which evidently we desperately need here.
Thomas Munro and Tom Lane, per report from David Fetter
Tighten the semantics of boundary-case timestamptz so that we allow
timestamps >= '4714-11-24 00:00+00 BC' and < 'ENDYEAR-01-01 00:00+00 AD'
exactly, no more and no less, but it is allowed to enter timestamps
within that range using non-GMT timezone offsets (which could make the
nominal date 4714-11-23 BC or ENDYEAR-01-01 AD). This eliminates
dump/reload failure conditions for timestamps near the endpoints.
To do this, separate checking of the inputs for date2j() from the
final range check, and allow the Julian date code to handle a range
slightly wider than the nominal range of the datatypes.
Also add a bunch of checks to detect out-of-range dates and timestamps
that formerly could be returned by operations such as date-plus-integer.
All C-level functions that return date, timestamp, or timestamptz should
now be proof against returning a value that doesn't pass IS_VALID_DATE()
or IS_VALID_TIMESTAMP().
Vitaly Burovoy, reviewed by Anastasia Lubennikova, and substantially
whacked around by me
For time masks, like HH24, MI, SS, CC, MM, do not count the negative
sign as part of the zero-padding length specified by the mask, e.g. have
to_char('-4 years'::interval, 'YY') return '-04', not '-4'.
Report by Craig Ringer
Commit ef3f9e642d2b2bba suppressed one cause of warnings here, but
recent clang on OS X is still unhappy because we're passing a "long"
to abs(). The fact that tm_gmtoff is declared as long is no doubt a
hangover from days when int might be only 16 bits; but Postgres has
never been able to run on such machines, so we can just cast it to int
with no worries. For consistency, also cast to int in the other
uses of tm_gmtoff in this stanza.
Note: this code is still broken on machines that don't follow C99
integer-division-truncates-towards-zero rules. Given the lack of
complaints about it, I don't feel a large desire to complicate things
enough to cope with the pre-C99 rules.
Revert "to_char(float4/8): zero pad to specified length". There are
too many platform-specific problems, and the proper rounding is missing.
Also revert companion patch 9d61b9953c1489cbb458ca70013cf5fca1bb7710.
Previously, zero padding was limited to the internal length, rather than
the specified length. This allows it to match to_char(int/numeric), which
always padded to the specified length.
Regression tests added.
BACKWARD INCOMPATIBILITY
We reserve space for the full amount, not one less. The affected checks
deal with localized month and day names. Today's DCH_MAX_ITEM_SIZ value
would suffice for a 60-byte day name, while the longest known is the
49-byte mn_CN.utf-8 word for "Saturday." Thus, the upshot of this
change is merely to avoid misdirecting future readers of the code; users
are not expected to see errors either way.
Previously very long localized month and weekday strings could
overflow the allocated buffers, causing a server crash.
Reported and patch reviewed by Noah Misch. Backpatch to all
supported versions.
Security: CVE-2015-0241
Previously very long field masks for floats could access memory
beyond the existing buffer allocated to hold the result.
Reported by Andres Freund and Peter Geoghegan. Backpatch to all
supported versions.
Security: CVE-2015-0241
When there are consecutive spaces (or other non-format-code characters) in
the format, we should advance over exactly that many characters of input.
The previous coding mistakenly did a "skip whitespace" action between such
characters, possibly allowing more input to be skipped than the user
intended. We only need to skip whitespace just before an actual field.
This is really a bug fix, but given the minimal number of field complaints
and the risk of breaking applications coded to expect the old behavior,
let's not back-patch it.
Jeevan Chalke
These changes should generally improve correctness/maintainability.
A nice side benefit is that several kilobytes move from initialized
data to text segment, allowing them to be shared across processes and
probably reducing copy-on-write overhead while forking a new backend.
Unfortunately this doesn't seem to help libpq in the same way (at least
not when it's compiled with -fpic on x86_64), but we can hope the linker
at least collects all nominally-const data together even if it's not
actually part of the text segment.
Also, make pg_encname_tbl[] static in encnames.c, since there seems
no very good reason for any other code to use it; per a suggestion
from Wim Lewis, who independently submitted a patch that was mostly
a subset of this one.
Oskari Saarenmaa, with some editorialization by me
Remove the variable from the enclosing scopes so that nothing can be
relying on it. The net result of this refactoring is that we get rid
of a few unnecessary strlen() calls.
Original patch from Greg Jaskiewicz, substantially expanded by me.
Add ability for to_char() to output the timezone's UTC offset (OF). We
already have the ability to return the timezone abbeviation (TZ/tz).
Per request from Andrew Dunstan
The existing code in NUM_numpart_from_char has hard-wired logic to treat
'.' as decimal point, even when we're using a locale-aware format string
and the locale says that '.' is the thousands separator. This results in
clearly wrong answers in FM mode (where we must be able to identify the
decimal point location), as per bug report from Patryk Kordylewski.
Since the initialization code in NUM_prepare_locale already sets up
Np->decimal as either the locale decimal-point string or "." depending
on which decimal-point format code was used, there's really no need to
have any extra logic at all in NUM_numpart_from_char: we only need to
test for a match to Np->decimal.
(Note: AFAICS there's nothing in here that explicitly checks for thousands
separators --- rather, any unmatched character is silently skipped over.
That's pretty bogus IMO but it's not the issue being complained of.)
This is a longstanding bug, but it's possible that some existing apps
are depending on '.' being recognized as decimal point even when using
a D format code. Hence, no back-patch. We should probably list this
as a potential incompatibility in the 9.3 release notes.
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.
Dates outside the supported range could be entered, but would not print
reasonably, and operations such as conversion to timestamp wouldn't behave
sanely either. Since this has the potential to result in undumpable table
data, it seems worth back-patching.
Hitoshi Harada
century specifications just like positive/AD centuries. Previously the
behavior was either wrong or inconsistent with positive/AD handling.
Centuries without years now always assume the first year of the century,
which is now documented.
The Solaris Studio compiler warns about these instances, unlike more
mainstream compilers such as gcc. But manual inspection showed that
the code is clearly not reachable, and we hope no worthy compiler will
complain about removing this code.
A thinko in commit 029dfdf1157b6d837a7b7211cd35b00c6bcd767c caused the year
519 to be handled differently from either adjacent year, which was not the
intention AFAICS. Report and diagnosis by Marc Cousin.
In passing, remove redundant re-tests of year value.
Trailing-zero stripping applied by the FM specifier could strip zeroes
to the left of the decimal point, for a format with no digit positions
after the decimal point (such as "FM999.").
Reported and diagnosed by Marti Raudsepp, though I didn't use his patch.