Add a comment explaining dropdb() can't rely on syscache. The issue with
flattened rows was fixed by commit 0f92b230f88b, but better to have
a clear explanation why the systable scan is necessary. The other places
doing in-place updates on pg_database have the same comment.
Suggestion and patch by Yugo Nagata. Backpatch to 12, same as the fix.
Author: Yugo Nagata
Backpatch-through: 12
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJTYsWWNkCt+-UnMhg=BiCD3Mh8c2JdHLofPxsW3m2dkDFw8RA@mail.gmail.com
Commit 274bbced disabled session tickets for TLSv1.3 on top of the
already disabled TLSv1.2 session tickets, but accidentally caused
a regression where TLSv1.2 session tickets were incorrectly sent.
Fix by unconditionally disabling TLSv1.2 session tickets and only
disable TLSv1.3 tickets when the right version of OpenSSL is used.
Backpatch to all supported branches.
Reported-by: Cameron Vogt <cvogt@automaticcontrols.net>
Reported-by: Fire Emerald <fire.github@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jacob Champion <jacob.champion@enterprisedb.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/DM6PR16MB3145CF62857226F350C710D1AB852@DM6PR16MB3145.namprd16.prod.outlook.com
Backpatch-through: v12
Commit ca051d8b101 called newlocale(LC_COLLATE, ...) instead of
newlocale(LC_COLLATE_MASK, ...), in code reached only on FreeBSD. They
have the same value on that OS, explaining why it worked. Fix.
Back-patch to 14, where ca051d8b101 landed.
One of the two slot scans in SlruSelectLRUPage was not walking only the
slots in the specific bank where the buffer could be; change it to do
that.
Oversight in 53c2a97a9266.
Author: Sergey Sargsyan <sergey.sargsyan.2001@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18582-5f301dd30ba91a38@postgresql.org
This adds two counters to the fixed-numbered stats of injection points
to track the number of times injection points have been cached and
loaded from the cache, as of the additions coming from a0a5869a8598 and
4b211003ecc2.
These should have been part of f68cd847fa40, but I have lacked time and
energy back then, and it did not prevent the code to be a useful
template.
While on it, this commit simplifies the description of a few tests while
adding coverage for the new stats data.
Author: Yogesh Sharma
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3a6977f7-54ab-43ce-8806-11d5e15526a2@catprosystems.com
MacPorts version 2.9.3 started failing in our ci_macports_packages.sh
script, for reasons not fully determined, but plausibly linked to the
release of 2.10.1. 2.10.1 seems to work, so let's switch to it.
Back-patch to 15, where CI began.
Reported-by: Peter Eisentraut <peter@eisentraut.org>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/81f104e8-f0a9-43c0-85bd-2bbbf590a5b8%40eisentraut.org
Commit c66a7d75e652 modified DROP DATABASE so that if interrupted, the
database is known to be in an invalid state and can only be dropped.
This is done by setting a flag using an in-place update, so that it's
not lost in case of rollback.
For databases with many ACLs, this may however fail like this:
ERROR: wrong tuple length
This happens because with many ACLs, the pg_database.datacl attribute
gets TOASTed. The dropdb() code reads the tuple from the syscache, which
means it's detoasted. But the in-place update expects the tuple length
to match the on-disk tuple.
Fixed by reading the tuple from the catalog directly, not from syscache.
Report and fix by Ayush Tiwari. Backpatch to 12. The DROP DATABASE fix
was backpatched to 11, but 11 is EOL at this point.
Reported-by: Ayush Tiwari
Author: Ayush Tiwari
Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra
Backpatch-through: 12
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJTYsWWNkCt+-UnMhg=BiCD3Mh8c2JdHLofPxsW3m2dkDFw8RA@mail.gmail.com
Commit 97ddda8a82ac470ae581d0eb485b6577707678bc removed the rmtree()
behavior from XLOG_TBLSPC_CREATE, obsoleting that part of the comment.
The comment's point about XLOG_DBASE_CREATE was wrong when commit
fa0f466d5329e10b16f3b38c8eaf5306f7e234e8 introduced the point. (It
would have been accurate if that commit had predated commit
fbcbc5d06f53aea412130deb52e216aa3883fb8d introducing the second
checkpoint of CREATE DATABASE.) Nothing can skip log_smgrcreate() on
the basis of wal_level=minimal, so don't comment on that.
Commit c6b92041d38512a4176ed76ad06f713d2e6c01a8 expanded WAL skipping
from five specific operations to relfilenodes generally, hence the
CreateDatabaseUsingFileCopy() comment change.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20231008022204.cc@rfd.leadboat.com
There's not much point in asserting a pointer isn't NULL after some code
has already dereferenced that pointer.
Adjust the code so that the Assert occurs before the pointer dereference.
The Assert probably has questionable value in the first place, but it
seems worth keeping around to document the contract between
CopyMultiInsertInfoNextFreeSlot() and its callers.
Author: Amul Sul <sulamul@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAJ_b94hXQzXaJxTLShkxQUgezf_SUxhzX9TH2f-g6gP7bne7g@mail.gmail.com
Commit 108d2adb9e missed updating a few places in the jsonb code
that rely on signed integer wrapping for correctness. These can
also be fixed by using pg_abs_s32() to negate a signed integer
(that is known to be negative) for comparison with an unsigned
integer.
Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/bfff906f-300d-81ea-83b7-f2c93845e7f2%40gmail.com
Duplicate the comment from astreamer_plain_writer_new instead of just
referring to it. Add a further note to mention that there are dangers
if anything else is written to the same FILE. Also add a comment where
we dup() the filehandle, referring to the existing comment in
astreamer_gzip_writer_finalize(), because the dup() looks wrong on
first glance without that comment to clarify.
Per concerns expressed by Tom Lane on pgsql-security, and using
some wording suggested by him.
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoYTFAD0YTh4HC1Nuhn0YEyoQi0_CENFgVzAY_YReiSksQ@mail.gmail.com
Not all messages that libpq received from the server would be sent
through our message tracing logic. This commit tries to fix that by
introducing a new function pqParseDone which make it harder to forget
about doing so.
The messages that we now newly send through our tracing logic are:
- CopyData (received by COPY TO STDOUT)
- Authentication requests
- NegotiateProtocolVersion
- Some ErrorResponse messages during connection startup
- ReadyForQuery when received after a FunctionCall message
Author: Jelte Fennema-Nio <postgres@jeltef.nl>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAGECzQSoPHtZ4xe0raJ6FYSEiPPS+YWXBhOGo+Y1YecLgknF3g@mail.gmail.com
"EXTRACT(WEEK FROM interval_value)" formerly threw an error.
Define it as "tm->tm_mday / 7". (With C99 division semantics,
this gives consistent results for negative intervals.)
"EXTRACT(QUARTER FROM interval_value)" has been implemented
all along, but it formerly gave extremely strange results for
negative intervals. Fix it so that the output for -N months
is the negative of the output for N months.
Per bug #18348 from Michael Bondarenko and subsequent discussion.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18348-b097a3587dfde8a4@postgresql.org
This commit updates a couple of places in the jsonb code to no
longer rely on signed integer wrapping for correctness. Like
commit 9e9a2b7031, this is intended to move us closer towards
removing -fwrapv, which may enable some compiler optimizations.
However, there is presently no plan to actually remove that
compiler option in the near future.
This commit makes use of the newly introduced pg_abs_s32() routine
to negate a signed integer (that is known to be negative) for
comparison with an unsigned integer. In passing, change one use of
INT_MIN to the more portable PG_INT32_MIN.
Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin
Author: Joseph Koshakow
Reviewed-by: Jian He
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAvxfHdBPOyEGS7s%2Bxf4iaW0-cgiq25jpYdWBqQqvLtLe_t6tw%40mail.gmail.com
libpq checks the permissions of the password file before opening it.
The way this is done in two separate operations, a static analyzer
would flag as a time-of-check-time-of-use violation. In practice, you
can't do anything with that, but it still seems better style to fix
it.
To fix it, open the file first and then check the permissions on the
opened file handle.
Reviewed-by: Aleksander Alekseev <aleksander@timescale.com>
Reviewed-by: Andreas Karlsson <andreas@proxel.se>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/a3356054-14ae-4e7a-acc6-249d19dac20b%40eisentraut.org
e85662df44 implemented GetStrictOldestNonRemovableTransactionId() function
for computation of xid horizon that avoid reporting of false errors.
However, GetStrictOldestNonRemovableTransactionId() uses
GetRunningTransactionData() even on standby leading to an assertion failure.
Given that we decided to ignore KnownAssignedXids and standby can't have
own running xids, we switch to use TransamVariables->nextXid as a xid horizon.
Also, revise the comment regarding ignoring KnownAssignedXids with more
detailed reasoning provided by Heikki.
Reported-by: Heikki Linnakangas
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/42218c4f-2c8d-40a3-8743-4d34dd0e4cce%40iki.fi
Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas
This commit attempts to update a few places, such as the money,
numeric, and timestamp types, to no longer rely on signed integer
wrapping for correctness. This is intended to move us closer
towards removing -fwrapv, which may enable some compiler
optimizations. However, there is presently no plan to actually
remove that compiler option in the near future.
Besides using some of the existing overflow-aware routines in
int.h, this commit introduces and makes use of some new ones.
Specifically, it adds functions that accept a signed integer and
return its absolute value as an unsigned integer with the same
width (e.g., pg_abs_s64()). It also adds functions that accept an
unsigned integer, store the result of negating that integer in a
signed integer with the same width, and return whether the negation
overflowed (e.g., pg_neg_u64_overflow()).
Finally, this commit adds a couple of tests for timestamps near
POSTGRES_EPOCH_JDATE.
Author: Joseph Koshakow
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane, Heikki Linnakangas, Jian He
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAvxfHdBPOyEGS7s%2Bxf4iaW0-cgiq25jpYdWBqQqvLtLe_t6tw%40mail.gmail.com
ecpg's lexer and parser files aren't normally processed by
pgindent, and unsurprisingly there's a lot of code in there
that doesn't really match project style. I spent some time
running pgindent over the fragments of these files that are
C code, and this is the result. This is in the same spirit
as commit 30ed71e42, though apparently Peter used a different
method for that one, since it didn't find these problems.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2011420.1713493114@sss.pgh.pa.us
We shouldn't ask the client to use a protocol version later than the
one that they requested. To avoid that, if the client requests a
version newer than the latest one we support, set FrontendProtocol
to the latest version we support, not the requested version. Then,
use that value when building the NegotiateProtocolVersion message.
(It seems good on general principle to avoid setting FrontendProtocol
to a version we don't support, anyway.)
None of this really matters right now, because we only support a
single protocol version, but if that ever changes, we'll need this.
Jelte Fennema-Nio, reviewed by me and incorporating some of my
proposed wording
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAGECzQTyXDNtMXdq2L-Wp=OvOCPa07r6+U_MGb==h90MrfT+fQ@mail.gmail.com
Currently mul_var() uses the schoolbook multiplication algorithm,
which is O(n^2) in the number of NBASE digits. To improve performance
for large inputs, convert the inputs to base NBASE^2 before
multiplying, which effectively halves the number of digits in each
input, theoretically speeding up the computation by a factor of 4. In
practice, the actual speedup for large inputs varies between around 3
and 6 times, depending on the system and compiler used. In turn, this
significantly reduces the runtime of the numeric_big regression test.
For this to work, 64-bit integers are required for the products of
base-NBASE^2 digits, so this works best on 64-bit machines, on which
it is faster whenever the shorter input has more than 4 or 5 NBASE
digits. On 32-bit machines, the additional overheads, especially
during carry propagation and the final conversion back to base-NBASE,
are significantly higher, and it is only faster when the shorter input
has more than around 50 NBASE digits. When the shorter input has more
than 6 NBASE digits (so that mul_var_short() cannot be used), but
fewer than around 50 NBASE digits, there may be a noticeable slowdown
on 32-bit machines. That seems to be an acceptable tradeoff, given the
performance gains for other inputs, and the effort that would be
required to maintain code specifically targeting 32-bit machines.
Joel Jacobson and Dean Rasheed.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9d8a4a42-c354-41f3-bbf3-199e1957db97%40app.fastmail.com
Commit ca481d3c9a introduced mul_var_short(), which is used by
mul_var() whenever the shorter input has 1-4 NBASE digits and the
exact product is requested. As speculated on in that commit, it can be
extended to work for more digits in the shorter input. This commit
extends it up to 6 NBASE digits (up to 24 decimal digits), for which
it also gives a significant speedup. This covers more cases likely to
occur in real-world queries, for which using base-NBASE^2 arithmetic
provides little benefit.
To avoid code bloat and duplication, refactor it a bit using macros
and exploiting the fact that some portions of the code are shared
between the different cases.
Dean Rasheed, reviewed by Joel Jacobson.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9d8a4a42-c354-41f3-bbf3-199e1957db97%40app.fastmail.com
Attempting to add a system column for a table to an existing publication
would result in the not very intuitive error message of:
ERROR: negative bitmapset member not allowed
Here we improve that to have it display the same error message as a user
would see if they tried adding a system column for a table when adding
it to the publication in the first place.
Doing this requires making the function which validates the list of
columns an extern function. The signature of the static function wasn't
an ideal external API as it made the code more complex than it needed to be.
Here we adjust the function to have it populate a Bitmapset of attribute
numbers. Doing it this way allows code simplification.
There was no particular bug here other than the weird error message, so
no backpatch.
Bug: #18558
Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin <exclusion@gmail.com>
Author: Peter Smith, David Rowley
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18558-411bc81b03592125@postgresql.org
Since these are single bytes instead of v2 or v3 messages they need
custom tracing logic. These "messages" don't even have official names
in the protocol specification, so I (Jelte) called them SSLResponse and
GSSENCResponse here.
Author: Jelte Fennema-Nio <postgres@jeltef.nl>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAGECzQSoPHtZ4xe0raJ6FYSEiPPS+YWXBhOGo+Y1YecLgknF3g@mail.gmail.com
According to the commit message in 8ec569479, we must have all variables
in header files marked with PGDLLIMPORT. In commit d3cc5ffe81f6 some
variables were moved from launch_backend.c file to several header files.
This adds PGDLLIMPORT to moved variables.
Author: Sofia Kopikova <s.kopikova@postgrespro.ru>
Reviewed-by: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/e0b17014-5319-4dd6-91cd-93d9c8fc9539%40postgrespro.ru
The TRACE_SORT macro guarded the availability of the trace_sort GUC
setting. But it has been enabled by default ever since it was
introduced in PostgreSQL 8.1, and there have been no reports that
someone wanted to disable it. So just remove the macro to simplify
things. (For the avoidance of doubt: The trace_sort GUC is still
there. This only removes the rarely-used macro guarding it.)
Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/be5f7162-7c1d-44e3-9a78-74dcaa6529f2%40eisentraut.org
Historically, MinGW environments lacked some Windows API calls, so we
took a different code path in win32_langinfo(). Somehow, the code
change in commit 35eeea62 (removing setlocale() calls) caused one
particular 001_initdb.pl test to fail on MinGW + ICU builds, because
pg_import_system_collations() found no collations. It might take a
MinGW user to discover the exact reason.
Updating that function to use the same code as MSVC seems to fix that
test, so lets do that. (There are plenty more places that test for MSVC
unnecessarily, to be investigated later.)
While here, also rename the helper function win32_langinfo() to
win32_get_codeset(), to explain what it does less confusingly; it's not
really a general langinfo() substitute.
Noticed by triggering the optional MinGW CI task; no build farm animals
failed.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGKBWfhXQ3J%2B2Lj5PhKvQnGD%3DsywA0XQcb7boTCf%3DerVLg%40mail.gmail.com
Previously, log_autovacuum_min_duration utilized dedicated code for
logging resource statistics, such as system and buffer usage during
autoanalyze. However, this logging functionality was not utilized by
ANALYZE VERBOSE.
This commit adds resource statistics reporting to ANALYZE VERBOSE by
reusing the same logging code as autoanalyze.
Author: Anthonin Bonnefoy
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAO6_Xqr__kTTCLkftqS0qSCm-J7_xbRG3Ge2rWhucxQJMJhcRA%40mail.gmail.com
Previously, (auto)analyze used global variables VacuumPageHit,
VacuumPageMiss, and VacuumPageDirty to track buffer usage. However,
pgBufferUsage provides a more generic way to track buffer usage with
support functions.
This change replaces those global variables with pgBufferUsage in
analyze. Since analyze was the sole user of those variables, it
removes their declarations. Vacuum previously used those variables but
replaced them with pgBufferUsage as part of a bug fix, commit
5cd72cc0c.
Additionally, it adjusts the buffer usage message in both vacuum and
analyze for better consistency.
Author: Anthonin Bonnefoy
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAO6_Xqr__kTTCLkftqS0qSCm-J7_xbRG3Ge2rWhucxQJMJhcRA%40mail.gmail.com
Commit 35eeea62 forgot to include <xlocale.h> when using locale_t
(which didn't seem to be required on newer Apple SDK as used by CI,
hence mistake). Let's see if this fixes build farm animals longfin and
sifika.
This gets rid of some setlocale() calls. The remaining call to
setlocale() in pg_get_encoding_from_locale() is a query of the name
of the current locale when none was provided (in a multi-threaded future
that would need more work).
All known non-Windows targets have nl_langinfo_l(), from POSIX 2008, and
for Windows we already do something thread-safe.
Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGJqVe0%2BPv9dvC9dSums_PXxGo9SWcxYAMBguWJUGbWz-A%40mail.gmail.com
We don't need configure probes for HAVE_LANGINFO_H (it is implied by
!WIN32), and we don't need to consider systems that have it but don't
define CODESET (that was for OpenBSD in commit 81cca218, but it has now
had it for 19 years).
Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGJqVe0%2BPv9dvC9dSums_PXxGo9SWcxYAMBguWJUGbWz-A%40mail.gmail.com