Robert Haas [Mon, 26 Feb 2018 14:30:12 +0000 (09:30 -0500)]
Add a new upper planner relation for partially-aggregated results.
Up until now, we've abused grouped_rel->partial_pathlist as a place to
store partial paths that have been partially aggregate, but that's
really not correct, because a partial path for a relation is supposed
to be one which produces the correct results with the addition of only
a Gather or Gather Merge node, and these paths also require a Finalize
Aggregate step. Instead, add a new partially_group_rel which can hold
either partial paths (which need to be gathered and then have
aggregation finalized) or non-partial paths (which only need to have
aggregation finalized). This allows us to reuse generate_gather_paths
for partially_grouped_rel instead of writing new code, so that this
patch actually basically no net new code while making things cleaner,
simplifying things for pending patches for partition-wise aggregate.
Robert Haas and Jeevan Chalke. The larger patch series of which this
patch is a part was also reviewed and tested by Antonin Houska,
Rajkumar Raghuwanshi, David Rowley, Dilip Kumar, Konstantin Knizhnik,
Pascal Legrand, Rafia Sabih, and me.
Tom Lane [Sun, 25 Feb 2018 22:27:20 +0000 (17:27 -0500)]
Un-break parallel pg_upgrade.
Commit b3f840120 changed pg_upgrade so that it'd actually drop and
re-create the template1 and postgres databases in the new cluster.
That works fine, serially. With the -j option it's not so fine, because
other per-database jobs might be launched while the template1 database is
dropped. Since they attempt to connect there to start up, kaboom.
This is the cause of the intermittent failures buildfarm member jacana
has been showing for the last month; evidently it is the only BF member
configured to run the pg_upgrade test with parallelism enabled.
Fix by processing template1 separately before we get into the parallel
sub-job launch loop. (We could alternatively have made the postgres DB
be the special case, but it seems likely that template1 will contain
less stuff and so we lose less parallelism with this choice.)
Peter Eisentraut [Sat, 24 Feb 2018 19:38:23 +0000 (14:38 -0500)]
Add current directory to Perl include path
Recent Perl versions don't have the current directory in the module
include path anymore, so we need to add it here explicitly to make these
scripts continue to work.
Tom Lane [Sat, 24 Feb 2018 18:23:38 +0000 (13:23 -0500)]
Add window RANGE support for float4, float8, numeric.
Commit 0a459cec9 left this for later, but since time's running out,
I went ahead and took care of it. There are more data types that
somebody might someday want RANGE support for, but this is enough
to satisfy all expectations of the SQL standard, which just says that
"numeric, datetime, and interval" types should have RANGE support.
Peter Eisentraut [Fri, 23 Feb 2018 18:54:45 +0000 (13:54 -0500)]
Check error messages in SSL tests
In tests that check whether a connection fails, also check the error
message. That makes sure that the connection was rejected for the right
reason.
This discovered that two tests had their connection failing for the
wrong reason. One test failed because pg_hba.conf was not set up to
allow that user, one test failed because the client key file did not
have the right permissions. Fix those tests and add a new one that is
really supposed to check the file permission issue.
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Peter Eisentraut [Sat, 24 Feb 2018 03:13:21 +0000 (22:13 -0500)]
Fix filtering of unsupported relations in logical replication
In the pgoutput plugin, skip changes for relations that are not
publishable, per is_publishable_class(). This concerns in particular
materialized views and information_schema tables. While those relations
cannot be part of a publication, per existing checks, they will be
considered by a FOR ALL TABLES publication. A subscription would not
actually apply changes for those relations, again per existing checks,
but trying to match incoming changes to local tables on the subscriber
would lead to errors if no matching local table exists. Skipping those
changes on the publisher avoids sending useless changes and eliminates
the error.
Bug: #15044 Reported-by: Chad Trabant <chad@iris.washington.edu> Reviewed-by: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndquadrant.com>
RANGE_OFFSET comparisons need to examine the first ORDER BY column,
which isn't necessarily the first column in the incoming tuples.
No idea how this slipped through initial testing.
Tom Lane [Fri, 23 Feb 2018 19:38:19 +0000 (14:38 -0500)]
Allow auto_explain.log_min_duration to go up to INT_MAX.
The previous limit of INT_MAX / 1000 seems to have been cargo-culted in
from somewhere else. Or possibly the value was converted to microseconds
at some point; but in all supported releases, it's just compared to other
values, so there's no need for the restriction. This change raises the
effective limit from ~35 minutes to ~24 days, which conceivably is useful
to somebody, and anyway it's more consistent with the range of the core
log_min_duration_statement GUC.
Per complaint from Kevin Bloch. Back-patch to all supported releases.
Tom Lane [Fri, 23 Feb 2018 18:47:33 +0000 (13:47 -0500)]
Fix planner failures with overlapping mergejoin clauses in an outer join.
Given overlapping or partially redundant join clauses, for example
t1 JOIN t2 ON t1.a = t2.x AND t1.b = t2.x
the planner's EquivalenceClass machinery will ordinarily refactor the
clauses as "t1.a = t1.b AND t1.a = t2.x", so that join processing doesn't
see multiple references to the same EquivalenceClass in a list of join
equality clauses. However, if the join is outer, it's incorrect to derive
a restriction clause on the outer side from the join conditions, so the
clause refactoring does not happen and we end up with overlapping join
conditions. The code that attempted to deal with such cases had several
subtle bugs, which could result in "left and right pathkeys do not match in
mergejoin" or "outer pathkeys do not match mergeclauses" planner errors,
if the selected join plan type was a mergejoin. (It does not appear that
any actually incorrect plan could have been emitted.)
The core of the problem really was failure to recognize that the outer and
inner relations' pathkeys have different relationships to the mergeclause
list. A join's mergeclause list is constructed by reference to the outer
pathkeys, so it will always be ordered the same as the outer pathkeys, but
this cannot be presumed true for the inner pathkeys. If the inner sides of
the mergeclauses contain multiple references to the same EquivalenceClass
({t2.x} in the above example) then a simplistic rendering of the required
inner sort order is like "ORDER BY t2.x, t2.x", but the pathkey machinery
recognizes that the second sort column is redundant and throws it away.
The mergejoin planning code failed to account for that behavior properly.
One error was to try to generate cut-down versions of the mergeclause list
from cut-down versions of the inner pathkeys in the same way as the initial
construction of the mergeclause list from the outer pathkeys was done; this
could lead to choosing a mergeclause list that fails to match the outer
pathkeys. The other problem was that the pathkey cross-checking code in
create_mergejoin_plan treated the inner and outer pathkey lists
identically, whereas actually the expectations for them must be different.
That led to false "pathkeys do not match" failures in some cases, and in
principle could have led to failure to detect bogus plans in other cases,
though there is no indication that such bogus plans could be generated.
Reported by Alexander Kuzmenkov, who also reviewed this patch. This has
been broken for years (back to around 8.3 according to my testing), so
back-patch to all supported branches.
Robert Haas [Fri, 23 Feb 2018 14:08:43 +0000 (09:08 -0500)]
Revise API for partition bound search functions.
Similar to what commit b0229235564fbe3a9b1cc115ea738a07e274bf30 for a
different set of functions, pass the required bits of the PartitionKey
instead of the whole thing. This allows these functions to be used
without needing the PartitionKey to be available.
Amit Langote. The larger patch series of which this patch is a part
has been reviewed and tested by Ashutosh Bapat, David Rowley, Dilip
Kumar, Jesper Pedersen, Rajkumar Raghuwanshi, Beena Emerson, Kyotaro
Horiguchi, Álvaro Herrera, and me, but especially and in great detail
by David Rowley.
Robert Haas [Fri, 23 Feb 2018 13:43:52 +0000 (08:43 -0500)]
Revise API for partition_rbound_cmp/partition_rbound_datum_cmp.
Instead of passing the PartitionKey, pass just the required bits of
it. This allows these functions to be used without needing the
PartitionKey to be available, which is important for several
pending patches.
Ashutosh Bapat, reviewed by Amit Langote, with a comment tweak
by me.
Peter Eisentraut [Tue, 20 Feb 2018 23:03:31 +0000 (18:03 -0500)]
Support parameters in CALL
To support parameters in CALL, move the parse analysis of the procedure
and arguments into the global transformation phase, so that the parser
hooks can be applied. And then at execution time pass the parameters
from ProcessUtility on to ExecuteCallStmt.
It seems some people are bothered by the outdated MD5 appearing in
example code. So replace it with more modern alternatives or by
a different example function.
Add the user-callable functions sha224, sha256, sha384, sha512. We
already had these in the C code to support SCRAM, but there was no test
coverage outside of the SCRAM tests. Adding these as user-callable
functions allows writing some tests. Also, we have a user-callable md5
function but no more modern alternative, which led to wide use of md5 as
a general-purpose hash function, which leads to occasional complaints
about using md5.
Also mark the existing md5 functions as leak-proof.
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Robert Haas [Thu, 22 Feb 2018 15:55:54 +0000 (10:55 -0500)]
Be lazier about partition tuple routing.
It's not necessary to fully initialize the executor data structures
for partitions to which no tuples are ever routed. Consider, for
example, an INSERT statement that inserts only one row: it only cares
about the partition to which that one row is routed. The new function
ExecInitPartitionInfo performs the initialization in question only
when a particular partition is about to receive a tuple. This includes
creating, validating, and saving a pointer to the ResultRelInfo,
setting up for speculative insertions, translating WCOs and
initializing the resulting expressions, translating returning lists
and building the appropriate projection information, and setting up a
tuple conversion map.
One thing that's not deferred is locking the child partitions; that
seems desirable but would need more thought. Still, testing shows
that this makes single-row inserts significantly faster on a table
with many partitions without harming the bulk-insert case.
Amit Langote, reviewed by Etsuro Fujita, with a few changes by me
Robert Haas [Thu, 22 Feb 2018 13:51:00 +0000 (08:51 -0500)]
Try to stabilize EXPLAIN output in partition_check test.
Commit 7d8ac9814bc9bb6df2d845dbabed38d7284c7c2c adjusted these
tests in the hope of preserving the plan shape, but I failed to
notice that the three partitions were, on my local machine, choosing
two different plan shapes. This is probably related to the fact
that all three tables have exactly the same row count. Try to
improve the situation by making pht1_e about half as large as
the other two.
Robert Haas [Thu, 22 Feb 2018 04:09:27 +0000 (23:09 -0500)]
Charge cpu_tuple_cost * 0.5 for Append and MergeAppend nodes.
Previously, Append didn't charge anything at all, and MergeAppend
charged only cpu_operator_cost, about half the value used here. This
change might make MergeAppend plans slightly more likely to be chosen
than before, since this commit increases the assumed cost for Append
-- with default values -- by 0.005 per tuple but MergeAppend by only
0.0025 per tuple. Since the comparisons required by MergeAppend are
costed separately, it's not clear why MergeAppend needs to be
otherwise more expensive than Append, so hopefully this is OK.
Prior to partition-wise join, it didn't really matter whether or not
an Append node had any cost of its own, because every plan had to use
the same number of Append or MergeAppend nodes and in the same places.
Only the relative cost of Append vs. MergeAppend made a difference.
Now, however, it is possible to avoid some of the Append nodes using a
partition-wise join, so it's worth making an effort. Pending patches
for partition-wise aggregate care too, because an Append of Aggregate
nodes will incur the Append overhead fewer times than an Aggregate
over an Append. Although in most cases this change will favor the use
of partition-wise techniques, it does the opposite when the join
cardinality is greater than the sum of the input cardinalities. Since
this situation arises in an existing regression test, I [rhaas]
adjusted it to keep the overall plan shape approximately the same.
Jeevan Chalke, per a suggestion from David Rowley. Reviewed by
Ashutosh Bapat. Some changes by me. The larger patch series of which
this patch is a part was also reviewed and tested by Antonin Houska,
Rajkumar Raghuwanshi, David Rowley, Dilip Kumar, Konstantin Knizhnik,
Pascal Legrand, Rafia Sabih, and me.
Tom Lane [Wed, 21 Feb 2018 23:40:24 +0000 (18:40 -0500)]
Repair pg_upgrade's failure to preserve relfrozenxid for matviews.
This oversight led to data corruption in matviews, manifesting as
"could not access status of transaction" before our most recent releases,
and "found xmin from before relfrozenxid" errors since then.
The proximate cause of the problem seems to have been confusion between
the task of preserving dropped-column status and the task of preserving
frozenxid status. Those are required for distinct sets of relkinds,
and the reasoning was entirely undocumented in the source code. In hopes
of forestalling future errors of the same kind, try to improve the
commentary in this area.
In passing, also improve the remarkably unhelpful comments around
pg_upgrade's set_frozenxids(). That's not actually buggy AFAICS,
but good luck figuring out what it does from the old comments.
Per report from Claudio Freire. It appears that bug #14852 from Alexey
Ermakov is an earlier report of the same issue, and there may be other
cases that we failed to identify at the time.
Patch by me based on analysis by Andres Freund. The bug dates back
to the introduction of matviews, so back-patch to all supported branches.
Andres Freund [Wed, 21 Feb 2018 02:24:00 +0000 (18:24 -0800)]
Blindly attempt to adapt sepgsql regression tests.
Commit bf6c614a2f2c58312b3be34a47e7fb7362e07bcb broke the sepgsql test
due to a new invocation of the function access hook during grouping
equal initialization.
The new behaviour seems at least as correct as the old one, so try
adapt the tests. As I've no working sepgsql setup here, this is just
going from buildfarm results.
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180217000337.lfsdvro3l6ccsksp@alap3.anarazel.de
Andres Freund [Tue, 20 Feb 2018 23:12:52 +0000 (15:12 -0800)]
Use platform independent type for TupleTableSlot->tts_off.
Previously tts_off was, for unknown reasons, of type long. For one
that's unnecessary as tuples are restricted in length, for another
long would be a bad choice of type even if that weren't the case, as
it's not reliably wider than an int. Also HeapTupleHeader->t_len is a
uint32.
This is split off from a larger patch implementing JITed tuple
deforming. Seems like an independent improvement, as tiny as it is.
Tom Lane [Tue, 20 Feb 2018 16:23:33 +0000 (11:23 -0500)]
Fix pg_dump's logic for eliding sequence limits that match the defaults.
The previous coding here applied atoi() to strings that could represent
values too large to fit in an int. If the overflowed value happened to
match one of the cases it was looking for, it would drop that limit
value from the output, leading to incorrect restoration of the sequence.
Avoid the unsafe behavior, and also make the logic cleaner by explicitly
calculating the default min/max values for the appropriate kind of
sequence.
Reported and patched by Alexey Bashtanov, though I whacked his patch
around a bit. Back-patch to v10 where the faulty logic was added.
Alvaro Herrera [Tue, 20 Feb 2018 15:08:55 +0000 (12:08 -0300)]
Adjust ALTER TABLE docs on partitioned constraints
Move the "additional restrictions" comment to ALTER TABLE ADD
CONSTRAINT instead of ADD CONSTRAINT USING INDEX; and in the latter
instead indicate that partitioned tables are unsupported
Noted by David G. Johnston
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKFQuwY4Ld7ecxL_KAmaxwt0FUu5VcPPN2L4dh+3BeYbrdBa5g@mail.gmail.com
Tom Lane [Mon, 19 Feb 2018 21:00:18 +0000 (16:00 -0500)]
Fix misbehavior of CTE-used-in-a-subplan during EPQ rechecks.
An updating query that reads a CTE within an InitPlan or SubPlan could get
incorrect results if it updates rows that are concurrently being modified.
This is caused by CteScanNext supposing that nothing inside its recursive
ExecProcNode call could change which read pointer is selected in the CTE's
shared tuplestore. While that's normally true because of scoping
considerations, it can break down if an EPQ plan tree gets built during the
call, because EvalPlanQualStart builds execution trees for all subplans
whether they're going to be used during the recheck or not. And it seems
like a pretty shaky assumption anyway, so let's just reselect our own read
pointer here.
Per bug #14870 from Andrei Gorita. This has been broken since CTEs were
implemented, so back-patch to all supported branches.
Alvaro Herrera [Mon, 19 Feb 2018 19:59:37 +0000 (16:59 -0300)]
Allow UNIQUE indexes on partitioned tables
If we restrict unique constraints on partitioned tables so that they
must always include the partition key, then our standard approach to
unique indexes already works --- each unique key is forced to exist
within a single partition, so enforcing the unique restriction in each
index individually is enough to have it enforced globally. Therefore we
can implement unique indexes on partitions by simply removing a few
restrictions (and adding others.)
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171222212921.hi6hg6pem2w2t36z@alvherre.pgsql
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171229230607.3iib6b62fn3uaf47@alvherre.pgsql Reviewed-by: Simon Riggs, Jesper Pedersen, Peter Eisentraut, Jaime
Casanova, Amit Langote
Tom Lane [Mon, 19 Feb 2018 04:32:56 +0000 (23:32 -0500)]
Remove redundant initialization of a local variable.
In what was doubtless a typo, commit bf6c614a2 introduced a duplicate
initialization of a local variable. This made Coverity unhappy, as well
as pretty much anybody reading the code. We don't even have a real use
for the local variable, so just remove it.
Alvaro Herrera [Sat, 17 Feb 2018 22:02:15 +0000 (19:02 -0300)]
Refactor format_type APIs to be more modular
Introduce a new format_type_extended, with a flags bitmask argument that
can modify the default behavior. A few compatibility and readability
wrappers remain:
format_type_be
format_type_be_qualified
format_type_with_typemod
while format_type_with_typemod_qualified, which had a single caller, is
removed.
Author: Michael Paquier, some revisions by me
Discussion: 20180213035107.GA2915@paquier.xyz
Andres Freund [Sat, 17 Feb 2018 05:17:38 +0000 (21:17 -0800)]
Allow tupleslots to have a fixed tupledesc, use in executor nodes.
The reason for doing so is that it will allow expression evaluation to
optimize based on the underlying tupledesc. In particular it will
allow to JIT tuple deforming together with the expression itself.
For that expression initialization needs to be moved after the
relevant slots are initialized - mostly unproblematic, except in the
case of nodeWorktablescan.c.
After doing so there's no need for ExecAssignResultType() and
ExecAssignResultTypeFromTL() anymore, as all former callers have been
converted to create a slot with a fixed descriptor.
When creating a slot with a fixed descriptor, tts_values/isnull can be
allocated together with the main slot, reducing allocation overhead
and increasing cache density a bit.
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171206093717.vqdxe5icqttpxs3p@alap3.anarazel.de
Andres Freund [Fri, 16 Feb 2018 05:55:31 +0000 (21:55 -0800)]
Do execGrouping.c via expression eval machinery, take two.
This has a performance benefit on own, although not hugely so. The
primary benefit is that it will allow for to JIT tuple deforming and
comparator invocations.
Large parts of this were previously committed (773aec7aa), but the
commit contained an omission around cross-type comparisons and was
thus reverted.
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171129080934.amqqkke2zjtekd4t@alap3.anarazel.de
elog(FATAL) would end up calling PortalCleanup(), which would call
executor shutdown code, which could fail and crash, especially under
parallel query. This was introduced by 8561e4840c81f7e345be2df170839846814fa004, which did not want to mark an
active portal as failed by a normal transaction abort anymore. But we
do need to do that for an elog(FATAL) exit. Introduce a variable
shmem_exit_inprogress similar to the existing proc_exit_inprogress, so
we can tell whether we are in the FATAL exit scenario.
Tom Lane [Fri, 16 Feb 2018 17:14:08 +0000 (12:14 -0500)]
Remove some inappropriate #includes.
Other header files should never #include postgres.h (nor postgres_fe.h,
nor c.h), per project policy. Also, there's no need for any backend .c
file to explicitly include elog.h or palloc.h, because postgres.h pulls
those in already.
Extracted from a larger patch by Kyotaro Horiguchi. The rest of the
removals he suggests require more study, but these are no-brainers.
There's an unresolved issue in the reverted commit: It only creates
one comparator function, but in for the nodeSubplan.c case we need
more (c.f. FindTupleHashEntry vs LookupTupleHashEntry calls in
nodeSubplan.c).
This isn't too difficult to fix, but it's not entirely trivial
either. The fact that the issue only causes breakage on 32bit systems
shows that the current test coverage isn't that great. To avoid
turning half the buildfarm red till those two issues are addressed,
revert.
Andres Freund [Fri, 16 Feb 2018 05:55:31 +0000 (21:55 -0800)]
Do execGrouping.c via expression eval machinery.
This has a performance benefit on own, although not hugely so. The
primary benefit is that it will allow for to JIT tuple deforming and
comparator invocations.
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171129080934.amqqkke2zjtekd4t@alap3.anarazel.de
Tom Lane [Thu, 15 Feb 2018 21:25:19 +0000 (16:25 -0500)]
Fix plpgsql to enforce domain checks when returning a NULL domain value.
If a plpgsql function is declared to return a domain type, and the domain's
constraints forbid a null value, it was nonetheless possible to return
NULL, because we didn't bother to check the constraints for a null result.
I'd noticed this while fooling with domains-over-composite, but had not
gotten around to fixing it immediately.
Add a regression test script exercising this and various other domain
cases, largely borrowed from the plpython_types test.
Although this is clearly a bug fix, I'm not sure whether anyone would
thank us for changing the behavior in stable branches, so I'm inclined
not to back-patch.
Tom Lane [Thu, 15 Feb 2018 18:56:38 +0000 (13:56 -0500)]
Doc: fix minor bug in CREATE TABLE example.
One example in create_table.sgml claimed to be showing table constraint
syntax, but it was really column constraint syntax due to the omission
of a comma. This is both wrong and confusing, so fix it in all
supported branches.
Tom Lane [Thu, 15 Feb 2018 18:41:30 +0000 (13:41 -0500)]
Cast to void in StaticAssertExpr, not its callers.
Seems a bit silly that many (in fact all, as of today) uses of
StaticAssertExpr would need to cast it to void to avoid warnings from
pickier compilers. Let's just do the cast right in the macro, instead.
In passing, change StaticAssertExpr to StaticAssertStmt in one
place where that seems more apropos.
Tom Lane [Thu, 15 Feb 2018 00:43:33 +0000 (19:43 -0500)]
Move the extern declaration for ExceptionalCondition into c.h.
This is the logical conclusion of our decision to support Assert()
in both frontend and backend code: it should be possible to use that
after including just c.h. But as things were arranged before, if
you wanted to use Assert() in code that might be compiled for either
environment, you had to include postgres.h for the backend case.
Let's simplify that.
Per buildfarm, some of whose members started throwing warnings after
commit 0c62356cc added an Assert in src/port/snprintf.c.
It's possible that some other src/port files that use the stanza
could now be simplified to just say '#include "c.h"'. I have not
tested for that, though, and it'd be unlikely to apply for more
than a small number of them.
Tom Lane [Wed, 14 Feb 2018 23:42:14 +0000 (18:42 -0500)]
Revert "Stabilize output of new regression test case".
This effectively reverts commit 9edc97b71 (although the test is now
in a different place and has different contents). We don't need that
hack anymore, because since commit 4b93f5799, this test case no longer
throws an error and so there's no displayed CONTEXT that could vary
depending on CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS. The underlying unstable-output
problem isn't really gone, of course, but it no longer manifests here.
Tom Lane [Wed, 14 Feb 2018 23:17:22 +0000 (18:17 -0500)]
Stabilize new plpgsql_record regression tests.
The buildfarm's CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS animals aren't happy with some
of the test cases added in commit 4b93f5799. There are two different
problems:
* In two places, a different CONTEXT stack is shown because the error
is detected in a different place, due to recompiling an expression
from scratch rather than re-using a previously cached plan for it.
I fixed these via the expedient of hiding the CONTEXT stack altogether.
* In one place, a test expected to fail (because a cached plan hadn't
been updated) actually succeeds (because the forced recompile makes
it good). I couldn't think of a simple workaround for this, so I've
just commented out that test step altogether.
I have hopes of improving things enough that both of these kluges can
be reverted eventually. The first one is the same kind of problem
previously discussed at
https://postgr.es/m/31545.1512924904@sss.pgh.pa.us
but there was insufficient agreement about how to fix it, so we
just hacked around the output instability (commit 9edc97b71).
The second issue should be fixed by allowing the plan to be rebuilt
when a type conflict is detected. But for today, let's just make the
buildfarm green again.
Andres Freund [Wed, 14 Feb 2018 22:17:28 +0000 (14:17 -0800)]
Return implementation defined value if pg_$op_s$bit_overflow overflows.
Some older compilers otherwise sometimes complain about undefined
values, even though the return value should not be used in the
overflow case. We assume that any decent compiler will optimize away
the unnecessary assignment in performance critical cases.
We do not want to restrain the returned value to a specific value,
e.g. 0 or the wrapped-around value, because some fast ways to
implement overflow detecting math do not easily allow for
that (e.g. msvc intrinsics). As the function documentation already
documents the returned value in case of intrinsics to be
implementation defined, no documentation has to be updated.
Per complaint from Tom Lane and his buildfarm member prairiedog.
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18169.1513958454@sss.pgh.pa.us
Tom Lane [Wed, 14 Feb 2018 21:06:49 +0000 (16:06 -0500)]
Silence assorted "variable may be used uninitialized" warnings.
All of these are false positives, but in each case a fair amount of
analysis is needed to see that, and it's not too surprising that not all
compilers are smart enough. (In particular, in the logtape.c case, a
compiler lacking the knowledge provided by the Assert would almost surely
complain, so that this warning will be seen in any non-assert build.)
Some of these are of long standing while others are pretty recent,
but it only seems worth fixing them in HEAD.
Tom Lane [Wed, 14 Feb 2018 20:06:01 +0000 (15:06 -0500)]
Add an assertion that we don't pass NULL to snprintf("%s").
Per commit e748e902d, we appear to have little or no coverage in the
buildfarm of machines that will dump core when asked to printf a
null string pointer. Let's try to improve that situation by adding
an assertion that will make src/port/snprintf.c behave that way.
Since it's just an assertion, it won't break anything in production
builds, but it will help developers find this type of oversight.
Note that while our buildfarm coverage of machines that use that
snprintf implementation is pretty thin on the Unix side (apparently
amounting only to gaur/pademelon), all of the MSVC critters use it.
Tom Lane [Wed, 14 Feb 2018 19:47:18 +0000 (14:47 -0500)]
Fix broken logic for reporting PL/Python function names in errcontext.
plpython_error_callback() reported the name of the function associated
with the topmost PL/Python execution context. This was not merely
wrong if there were nested PL/Python contexts, but it risked a core
dump if the topmost one is an inline code block rather than a named
function. That will have proname = NULL, and so we were passing a NULL
pointer to snprintf("%s"). It seems that none of the PL/Python-testing
machines in the buildfarm will dump core for that, but some platforms do,
as reported by Marina Polyakova.
Investigation finds that there actually is an existing regression test
that used to prove that the behavior was wrong, though apparently no one
had noticed that it was printing the wrong function name. It stopped
showing the problem in 9.6 when we adjusted psql to not print CONTEXT
by default for NOTICE messages. The problem is masked (if your platform
avoids the core dump) in error cases, because PL/Python will throw away
the originally generated error info in favor of a new traceback produced
at the outer level.
Repair by using ErrorContextCallback.arg to pass the correct context to
the error callback. Add a regression test illustrating correct behavior.
Back-patch to all supported branches, since they're all broken this way.
Tom Lane [Wed, 14 Feb 2018 03:15:08 +0000 (22:15 -0500)]
Support CONSTANT/NOT NULL/initial value for plpgsql composite variables.
These features were never implemented previously for composite or record
variables ... not that the documentation admitted it, so there's no doc
updates here.
This also fixes some issues concerning enforcing DOMAIN NOT NULL
constraints against plpgsql variables, although I'm not sure that
that topic is completely dealt with.
I created a new plpgsql test file for these features, and moved the
one relevant existing test case into that file.
Tom Lane [Wed, 14 Feb 2018 00:20:37 +0000 (19:20 -0500)]
Speed up plpgsql trigger startup by introducing "promises".
Over the years we've accreted quite a few special variables that are
predefined in plpgsql trigger functions. The cost of initializing these
variables to their defined values turns out to be a significant part of
the runtime of simple triggers; but, undoubtedly, most real-world triggers
never examine the values of most of these variables.
To improve matters, invent the notion of a variable that has a "promise"
attached to it, specifying which of the predetermined values should be
assigned to the variable if anything ever reads it. This eliminates all
the unneeded startup overhead, in return for a small penalty on accesses
to these variables.
Tom Lane [Wed, 14 Feb 2018 00:10:43 +0000 (19:10 -0500)]
Speed up plpgsql function startup by doing fewer pallocs.
Previously, copy_plpgsql_datum did a separate palloc for each variable
needing instance-local storage. In simple benchmarks this made for a
noticeable fraction of the total runtime. Improve it by precalculating
the space needed for all of a function's variables and doing just one
palloc for all of them.
In passing, remove PLPGSQL_DTYPE_EXPR from the list of plpgsql "datum"
types, since in fact it has nothing in common with the others, and there
is noplace that needs to discriminate on the basis of dtype between an
expression and any type of datum. And add comments clarifying which
datum struct fields are generic and which aren't.
Tom Lane [Tue, 13 Feb 2018 23:52:21 +0000 (18:52 -0500)]
Make plpgsql use its DTYPE_REC code paths for composite-type variables.
Formerly, DTYPE_REC was used only for variables declared as "record";
variables of named composite types used DTYPE_ROW, which is faster for
some purposes but much less flexible. In particular, the ROW code paths
are entirely incapable of dealing with DDL-caused changes to the number
or data types of the columns of a row variable, once a particular plpgsql
function has been parsed for the first time in a session. And, since the
stored representation of a ROW isn't a tuple, there wasn't any easy way
to deal with variables of domain-over-composite types, since the domain
constraint checking code would expect the value to be checked to be a
tuple. A lesser, but still real, annoyance is that ROW format cannot
represent a true NULL composite value, only a row of per-field NULL
values, which is not exactly the same thing.
Hence, switch to using DTYPE_REC for all composite-typed variables,
whether "record", named composite type, or domain over named composite
type. DTYPE_ROW remains but is used only for its native purpose, to
represent a fixed-at-compile-time list of variables, for instance the
targets of an INTO clause.
To accomplish this without taking significant performance losses, introduce
infrastructure that allows storing composite-type variables as "expanded
objects", similar to the "expanded array" infrastructure introduced in
commit 1dc5ebc90. A composite variable's value is thereby kept (most of
the time) in the form of separate Datums, so that field accesses and
updates are not much more expensive than they were in the ROW format.
This holds the line, more or less, on performance of variables of named
composite types in field-access-intensive microbenchmarks, and makes
variables declared "record" perform much better than before in similar
tests. In addition, the logic involved with enforcing composite-domain
constraints against updates of individual fields is in the expanded
record infrastructure not plpgsql proper, so that it might be reusable
for other purposes.
In further support of this, introduce a typcache feature for assigning a
unique-within-process identifier to each distinct tuple descriptor of
interest; in particular, DDL alterations on composite types result in a new
identifier for that type. This allows very cheap detection of the need to
refresh tupdesc-dependent data. This improves on the "tupDescSeqNo" idea
I had in commit 687f096ea: that assigned identifying sequence numbers to
successive versions of individual composite types, but the numbers were not
unique across different types, nor was there support for assigning numbers
to registered record types.
In passing, allow plpgsql functions to accept as well as return type
"record". There was no good reason for the old restriction, and it
was out of step with most of the other PLs.
Peter Eisentraut [Tue, 13 Feb 2018 14:12:45 +0000 (09:12 -0500)]
In LDAP test, restart after pg_hba.conf changes
Instead of issuing a reload after pg_hba.conf changes between test
cases, run a full restart. With a reload, an error in the new
pg_hba.conf is ignored and the tests will continue to run with the old
settings, invalidating the subsequent test cases. With a restart, a
faulty pg_hba.conf will lead to the test being aborted, which is what
we'd rather want.
Robert Haas [Mon, 12 Feb 2018 17:55:12 +0000 (12:55 -0500)]
Fix parallel index builds for dynamic_shared_memory_type=none.
The previous code failed to realize that this setting effectively
disables parallelism, and would crash if it decided to attempt
parallelism anyway. Instead, treat it as a disabling condition.
Kyotaro Horiguchi, who also reported the issue. Reviewed by Michael
Paquier and Peter Geoghegan.
Tom Lane [Sun, 11 Feb 2018 18:24:15 +0000 (13:24 -0500)]
Fix assorted errors in pg_dump's handling of extended statistics objects.
pg_dump supposed that a stats object necessarily shares the same schema
as its underlying table, and that it doesn't have a separate owner.
These things may have been true during early development of the feature,
but they are not true as of v10 release.
Failure to track the object's schema separately turns out to have only
limited consequences, because pg_get_statisticsobjdef() always schema-
qualifies the target object name in the generated CREATE STATISTICS command
(a decision out of step with the rest of ruleutils.c, but I digress).
Therefore the restored object would be in the right schema, so that the
only problem is that the TOC entry would be mislabeled as to schema. That
could lead to wrong decisions for schema-selective restores, for example.
The ownership issue is a bit more serious: not only was the TOC entry
potentially mislabeled as to owner, but pg_dump didn't bother to issue an
ALTER OWNER command at all, so that after restore the stats object would
continue to be owned by the restoring superuser.
A final point is that decisions as to whether to dump a stats object or
not were driven by whether the underlying table was dumped or not. While
that's not wrong on its face, it won't scale nicely to the planned future
extension to cross-table statistics. Moreover, that design decision comes
out of the view of stats objects as being auxiliary to a particular table,
like a rule or trigger, which is exactly where the above problems came
from. Since we're now treating stats objects more like independent objects
in their own right, they ought to behave like standalone objects for this
purpose too. So change to using the generic selectDumpableObject() logic
for them (which presently amounts to "dump if containing schema is to be
dumped").
Along the way to fixing this, restructure so that getExtendedStatistics
collects the identity info (only) for all extended stats objects in one
query, and then for each object actually being dumped, we retrieve the
definition in dumpStatisticsExt. This is necessary to ensure that
schema-qualification in the generated CREATE STATISTICS command happens
with respect to the search path that pg_dump will now be using at restore
time (ie, the schema the stats object is in, not that of the underlying
table). It's probably also significantly faster in the typical scenario
where only a minority of tables have extended stats.
Back-patch to v10 where extended stats were introduced.
Tom Lane [Sat, 10 Feb 2018 18:37:12 +0000 (13:37 -0500)]
Avoid premature free of pass-by-reference CALL arguments.
Prematurely freeing the EState used to evaluate CALL arguments led, in some
cases, to passing dangling pointers to the procedure. This was masked in
trivial cases because the argument pointers would point to Const nodes in
the original expression tree, and in some other cases because the result
value would end up in the standalone ExprContext rather than in memory
belonging to the EState --- but that wasn't exactly high quality
programming either, because the standalone ExprContext was never
explicitly freed, breaking assorted API contracts.
In addition, using a separate EState for each argument was just silly.
So let's use just one EState, and one ExprContext, and make the latter
belong to the former rather than be standalone, and clean up the EState
(and hence the ExprContext) post-call.
While at it, improve the function's commentary a bit.
Tom Lane [Sat, 10 Feb 2018 18:05:14 +0000 (13:05 -0500)]
Fix oversight in CALL argument handling, and do some minor cleanup.
CALL statements cannot support sub-SELECTs in the arguments of the called
procedure, since they just use ExecEvalExpr to evaluate such arguments.
Teach transformSubLink() to reject the case, as it already does for other
contexts in which subqueries are not supported.
In passing, s/EXPR_KIND_CALL/EXPR_KIND_CALL_ARGUMENT/ to make that enum
symbol line up more closely with the phrasing of the error messages it is
associated with. And fix someone's weak grasp of English grammar in the
preceding EXPR_KIND_PARTITION_EXPRESSION addition. Also update an
incorrect comment in resolve_unique_index_expr (possibly it was correct
when written, but nowadays transformExpr definitely does reject SRFs here).
Per report from Pavel Stehule --- but this resolves only one of the bugs
he mentions.
Alvaro Herrera [Sat, 10 Feb 2018 13:01:37 +0000 (10:01 -0300)]
Mention partitioned indexes in "Data Definition" chapter
We can now create indexes more easily than before, so update this
chapter to use the simpler instructions.
After an idea of Amit Langote. I (Álvaro) opted to do more invasive
surgery and remove the previous suggestion to create per-partition
indexes, which his patch left in place.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/eafaaeb1-f0fd-d010-dd45-07db0300f645@lab.ntt.co.jp
Author: Amit Langote, Álvaro Herrera
Robert Haas [Fri, 9 Feb 2018 20:48:18 +0000 (15:48 -0500)]
Clear stmt_timeout_active if we disable_all_timeouts.
Otherwise, we can end up with the flag set when the timeout is
actually disabled, leading to misbehavior. Commit f8e5f156b30efee5d0038b03e38735773abcb7ed introduced this bug.
Reported by Peter Eisentraut. Analysis and fix by Thomas Munro,
tweaked by me.
Robert Haas [Fri, 9 Feb 2018 20:24:35 +0000 (15:24 -0500)]
postgres_fdw: Attmempt to stabilize regression tests.
Even after commit 882ea509fe7a4711fe25463427a33262b873dfa1, some
buildfarm members are still failing in the postgres_fdw tests.
Try to fix that by disabling use of remote statistics for some
test cases.
Robert Haas [Thu, 8 Feb 2018 17:31:48 +0000 (12:31 -0500)]
Fix possible infinite loop with Parallel Append.
When the previously-chosen plan was non-partial, all pa_finished
flags for partial plans are now set, and pa_next_plan has not yet
been set to INVALID_SUBPLAN_INDEX, the previous code could go into
an infinite loop.
Report by Rajkumar Raghuwanshi. Patch by Amit Khandekar and me.
Review by Kyotaro Horiguchi.
Instead of using the psql/libpq connection string as the displayed test
name and relying on "notes" and source code comments to explain the
tests, give the tests self-explanatory names, like we do elsewhere.
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
Robert Haas [Thu, 8 Feb 2018 01:38:08 +0000 (20:38 -0500)]
postgres_fdw: Remove CTID output from some tests.
Commit 1bc0100d270e5bcc980a0629b8726a32a497e788 added these tests,
but they're not stable enough to survive in the buildfarm. Remove
CTIDs from the output in the hopes of fixing that.
Robert Haas [Wed, 7 Feb 2018 20:34:30 +0000 (15:34 -0500)]
postgres_fdw: Push down UPDATE/DELETE joins to remote servers.
Commit 0bf3ae88af330496517722e391e7c975e6bad219 allowed direct
foreign table modification; instead of fetching each row, updating
it locally, and then pushing the modification back to the remote
side, we would instead do all the work on the remote server via a
single remote UPDATE or DELETE command. However, that commit only
enabled this optimization when join tree consisted only of the
target table.
This change allows the same optimization when an UPDATE statement
has a FROM clause or a DELETE statement has a USING clause. This
works much like ordinary foreign join pushdown, in that the tables
must be on the same remote server, relevant parts of the query
must be pushdown-safe, and so forth.
Etsuro Fujita, reviewed by Ashutosh Bapat, Rushabh Lathia, and me.
Some formatting corrections by me.
Add explicit collation on the trigger name to avoid locale dependencies.
Also restrict the tables selected, to avoid interference from
concurrently running tests.
Magnus Hagander [Wed, 7 Feb 2018 09:53:56 +0000 (10:53 +0100)]
Change default git repo URL to https
Since we now support the server side handler for git over https (so
we're no longer using the "dumb protocol"), make https the primary
choice for cloning the repository, and the git protocol the secondary
choice.
In passing, also change the links to git-scm.com from http to https.
Reviewed by Stefan Kaltenbrunner and David G. Johnston
Tom Lane [Wed, 7 Feb 2018 05:06:50 +0000 (00:06 -0500)]
Support all SQL:2011 options for window frame clauses.
This patch adds the ability to use "RANGE offset PRECEDING/FOLLOWING"
frame boundaries in window functions. We'd punted on that back in the
original patch to add window functions, because it was not clear how to
do it in a reasonably data-type-extensible fashion. That problem is
resolved here by adding the ability for btree operator classes to provide
an "in_range" support function that defines how to add or subtract the
RANGE offset value. Factoring it this way also allows the operator class
to avoid overflow problems near the ends of the datatype's range, if it
wishes to expend effort on that. (In the committed patch, the integer
opclasses handle that issue, but it did not seem worth the trouble to
avoid overflow failures for datetime types.)
The patch includes in_range support for the integer_ops opfamily
(int2/int4/int8) as well as the standard datetime types. Support for
other numeric types has been requested, but that seems like suitable
material for a follow-on patch.
In addition, the patch adds GROUPS mode which counts the offset in
ORDER-BY peer groups rather than rows, and it adds the frame_exclusion
options specified by SQL:2011. As far as I can see, we are now fully
up to spec on window framing options.
Existing behaviors remain unchanged, except that I changed the errcode
for a couple of existing error reports to meet the SQL spec's expectation
that negative "offset" values should be reported as SQLSTATE 22013.
Internally and in relevant parts of the documentation, we now consistently
use the terminology "offset PRECEDING/FOLLOWING" rather than "value
PRECEDING/FOLLOWING", since the term "value" is confusingly vague.
Oliver Ford, reviewed and whacked around some by me