Tom Lane [Wed, 3 Mar 2010 17:29:53 +0000 (17:29 +0000)]
Export xml.c's libxml-error-handling support so that contrib/xml2 can use it
too, instead of duplicating the functionality (badly).
I renamed xml_init to pg_xml_init, because the former seemed just a bit too
generic to be safe as a global symbol. I considered likewise renaming
xml_ereport to pg_xml_ereport, but felt that the reference to ereport probably
made it sufficiently PG-centric already.
Fix numericlocale psql option when used with a null string and latex and troff
formats; a null string must not be formatted as a numeric. The more exotic
formats latex and troff also incorrectly formatted all strings as numerics
when numericlocale was on.
Backpatch to 8.1 where numericlocale option was added.
Tom Lane [Mon, 1 Mar 2010 18:08:07 +0000 (18:08 +0000)]
Fix contrib/xml2 so regression test still works when it's built without libxslt.
This involves modifying the module to have a stable ABI, that is, the
xslt_process() function still exists even without libxslt. It throws a
runtime error if called, but doesn't prevent executing the CREATE FUNCTION
call. This is a good thing anyway to simplify cross-version upgrades.
Tom Lane [Mon, 1 Mar 2010 05:16:40 +0000 (05:16 +0000)]
Remove xmlCleanupParser calls from contrib/xml2.
These are unnecessary and probably dangerous. I don't see any immediate
risk situations in the core XML support or contrib/xml2 itself, but there
could be issues with external uses of libxml2, and in any case it's an
accident waiting to happen.
Tom Lane [Mon, 1 Mar 2010 03:41:04 +0000 (03:41 +0000)]
Back-patch today's memory management fixups in contrib/xml2.
Prior to 8.3, these changes are not critical for compatibility with core
Postgres, since core had no libxml2 calls then. However there is still
a risk if contrib/xml2 is used along with libxml2 functionality in Perl
or other loadable modules. So back-patch to all versions.
Also back-patch addition of regression tests. I'm not sure how many of
the cases are interesting without the interaction with core xml code,
but a silly regression test is still better than none at all.
Tom Lane [Thu, 25 Feb 2010 21:00:03 +0000 (21:00 +0000)]
Allow predicate_refuted_by() to deduce that NOT A refutes A.
We had originally made the stronger assumption that NOT A refutes any B
if B implies A, but this fails in three-valued logic, because we need to
prove B is false not just that it's not true. However the logic does
go through if B is equal to A.
Recognizing this limited case is enough to handle examples that arise when
we have simplified "bool_var = true" or "bool_var = false" to just "bool_var"
or "NOT bool_var". If we had not done that simplification then the
btree-operator proof logic would have been able to prove that the expressions
were contradictory, but only for identical expressions being compared to the
constants; so handling identical A and B covers all the same cases.
The motivation for doing this is to avoid unexpected asymmetrical behavior
when a partitioned table uses a boolean partitioning column, as in today's
gripe from Dominik Sander.
Back-patch to 8.2, which is as far back as predicate_refuted_by attempts to
do anything at all with NOTs.
Magnus Hagander [Thu, 25 Feb 2010 13:26:26 +0000 (13:26 +0000)]
Add configuration parameter ssl_renegotiation_limit to control
how often we do SSL session key renegotiation. Can be set to
0 to disable renegotiation completely, which is required if
a broken SSL library is used (broken patches to CVE-2009-3555
a known cause) or when using a client library that can't do
renegotiation.
Tom Lane [Wed, 24 Feb 2010 18:02:30 +0000 (18:02 +0000)]
Allow zero-dimensional (ie, empty) arrays in contrib/ltree operations.
The main motivation for changing this is bug #4921, in which it's pointed out
that it's no longer safe to apply ltree operations to the result of
ARRAY(SELECT ...) if the sub-select might return no rows. Before 8.3,
the ARRAY() construct would return NULL, which might or might not be helpful
but at least it wouldn't result in an error. Now it returns an empty array
which results in a failure for no good reason, since the ltree operations
are all perfectly capable of dealing with zero-element arrays.
As far as I can find, these ltree functions are the only places where zero
array dimensionality is rejected unnecessarily.
Back-patch to 8.3 to prevent behavioral regression of queries that worked
in older releases.
Itagaki Takahiro [Fri, 19 Feb 2010 01:04:39 +0000 (01:04 +0000)]
Fix STOP WAL LOCATION in backup history files no to return the next
segment of XLOG_BACKUP_END record even if the the record is placed
at a segment boundary. Furthermore the previous implementation could
return nonexistent segment file name when the boundary is in segments
that has "FE" suffix; We never use segments with "FF" suffix.
Backpatch to 8.0, where hot backup was introduced.
Tom Lane [Thu, 18 Feb 2010 23:50:12 +0000 (23:50 +0000)]
Volatile-ize all five places where we expect a PG_TRY block to restore
old memory context in plpython. Before only one of them was marked
volatile, but per report from Zdenek Kotala, some compilers do the
wrong thing here.
Tom Lane [Thu, 18 Feb 2010 22:43:39 +0000 (22:43 +0000)]
Provide some rather hokey ways for EXPLAIN to print FieldStore and assignment
ArrayRef expressions that are not in the immediate context of an INSERT or
UPDATE targetlist. Such cases never arise in stored rules, so ruleutils.c
hadn't tried to handle them. However, they do occur in the targetlists of
plans derived from such statements, and now that EXPLAIN VERBOSE tries to
print targetlists, we need some way to deal with the case.
I chose to represent an assignment ArrayRef as "array[subscripts] := source",
which is fairly reasonable and doesn't omit any information. However,
FieldStore is problematic because the planner will fold multiple assignments
to fields of the same composite column into one FieldStore, resulting in a
structure that is hard to understand at all, let alone display comprehensibly.
So in that case I punted and just made it print the source expression(s).
Backpatch to 8.4 --- the lack of functionality exists in older releases,
but doesn't seem to be important for lack of anything that would call it.
Tom Lane [Thu, 18 Feb 2010 18:41:55 +0000 (18:41 +0000)]
Fix ExecEvalArrayRef to pass down the old value of the array element or slice
being assigned to, in case the expression to be assigned is a FieldStore that
would need to modify that value. The need for this was foreseen some time
ago, but not implemented then because we did not have arrays of composites.
Now we do, but the point evidently got overlooked in that patch. Net result
is that updating a field of an array element doesn't work right, as
illustrated if you try the new regression test on an unpatched backend.
Noted while experimenting with EXPLAIN VERBOSE, which has also got some issues
in this area.
Backpatch to 8.3, where arrays of composites were introduced.
Tom Lane [Thu, 18 Feb 2010 03:06:53 +0000 (03:06 +0000)]
Force READY portals into FAILED state when a transaction or subtransaction
is aborted, if they were created within the failed xact. This prevents
ExecutorEnd from being run on them, which is a good idea because they may
contain references to tables or other objects that no longer exist.
In particular this is hazardous when auto_explain is active, but it's
really rather surprising that nobody has seen an issue with this before.
I'm back-patching this to 8.4, since that's the first version that contains
auto_explain or an ExecutorEnd hook, but I wonder whether we shouldn't
back-patch further.
Joe Conway [Wed, 3 Feb 2010 23:01:23 +0000 (23:01 +0000)]
Check to ensure the number of primary key fields supplied does not
exceed the total number of non-dropped source table fields for
dblink_build_sql_*(). Addresses bug report from Rushabh Lathia.
Tom Lane [Tue, 2 Feb 2010 19:12:34 +0000 (19:12 +0000)]
CLUSTER specified the wrong namespace when renaming toast tables of temporary
relations (they don't live in pg_toast). This caused an Assert failure in
assert-enabled builds. So far as I can see, in a non-assert build it would
only have messed up the checks for conflicting names, so a failure would be
quite improbable but perhaps not impossible.
Tom Lane [Mon, 1 Feb 2010 02:45:35 +0000 (02:45 +0000)]
Change regexp engine's ccondissect/crevdissect routines to perform DFA
matching before recursing instead of after. The DFA match eliminates
unworkable midpoint choices a lot faster than the recursive check, in most
cases, so doing it first can speed things up; particularly in pathological
cases such as recently exhibited by Michael Glaesemann.
In addition, apply some cosmetic changes that were applied upstream (in the
Tcl project) at the same time, in order to sync with upstream version 1.15
of regexec.c.
Upstream apparently intends to backpatch this, so I will too. The
pathological behavior could be unpleasant if encountered in the field,
which seems to justify any risk of introducing new bugs.
Tom Lane, reviewed by Donal K. Fellows of Tcl project
Magnus Hagander [Sun, 31 Jan 2010 17:16:29 +0000 (17:16 +0000)]
Fix race condition in win32 signal handling.
There was a race condition where the receiving pipe could be closed by the
child thread if the main thread was pre-empted before it got a chance to
create a new one, and the dispatch thread ran to completion during that time.
One symptom of this is that rows in pg_listener could be dropped under
heavy load.
Analysis and original patch by Radu Ilie, with some small
modifications by Magnus Hagander.
Tom Lane [Sat, 30 Jan 2010 20:09:59 +0000 (20:09 +0000)]
Avoid performing encoding conversion on command tag strings during EndCommand.
Since all current and foreseeable future command tags will be pure ASCII,
there is no need to do conversion on them. This saves a few cycles and also
avoids polluting otherwise-pristine subtransaction memory contexts, which
is the cause of the backend memory leak exhibited in bug #5302. (Someday
we'll probably want to have a better method of determining whether
subtransaction contexts need to be kept around, but today is not that day.)
Backpatch to 8.0. The cycle-shaving aspect of this would work in 7.4
too, but without subtransactions the memory-leak aspect doesn't apply,
so it doesn't seem worth touching 7.4.
Tom Lane [Sat, 30 Jan 2010 18:59:58 +0000 (18:59 +0000)]
Fix memory leakage introduced into print_aligned_text by 8.4 changes
(failure to free col_lineptrs[] array elements) and exacerbated in the
current devel cycle (failure to free "wrap"). This resulted in moderate
bloat of psql over long script runs. Noted while testing bug #5302,
although what the reporter was complaining of was backend-side leakage.
Tom Lane [Mon, 25 Jan 2010 01:58:19 +0000 (01:58 +0000)]
Apply Tcl_Init() to the "hold" interpreter created by pltcl.
You might think this is unnecessary since that interpreter is never used
to run code --- but it turns out that's wrong. As of Tcl 8.5, the "clock"
command (alone among builtin Tcl commands) is partially implemented by
loaded-on-demand Tcl code, which means that it fails if there's not
unknown-command support, and also that it's impossible to run it directly
in a safe interpreter. The way they get around the latter is that
Tcl_CreateSlave() automatically sets up an alias command that forwards any
execution of "clock" in a safe slave interpreter to its parent interpreter.
Thus, when attempting to execute "clock" in trusted pltcl, the command
actually executes in the "hold" interpreter, where it will fail if
unknown-command support hasn't been introduced by sourcing the standard
init.tcl script, which is done by Tcl_Init(). (This is a pretty dubious
design decision on the Tcl boys' part, if you ask me ... but they didn't.)
Back-patch all the way. It's not clear that anyone would try to use ancient
versions of pltcl with a recent Tcl, but it's not clear they wouldn't, either.
Also add a regression test using "clock", in branches that have regression
test support for pltcl.
Tom Lane [Sun, 24 Jan 2010 21:49:31 +0000 (21:49 +0000)]
Fix assorted core dumps and Assert failures that could occur during
AbortTransaction or AbortSubTransaction, when trying to clean up after an
error that prevented (sub)transaction start from completing:
* access to TopTransactionResourceOwner that might not exist
* assert failure in AtEOXact_GUC, if AtStart_GUC not called yet
* assert failure or core dump in AfterTriggerEndSubXact, if
AfterTriggerBeginSubXact not called yet
Per testing by injecting elog(ERROR) at successive steps in StartTransaction
and StartSubTransaction. It's not clear whether all of these cases could
really occur in the field, but at least one of them is easily exposed by
simple stress testing, as per my accidental discovery yesterday.
Tom Lane [Sat, 23 Jan 2010 21:29:06 +0000 (21:29 +0000)]
Insert CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS calls into loops in dbsize.c, to ensure that
the various disk-size-reporting functions will respond to query cancel
reasonably promptly even in very large databases. Per report from
Kevin Grittner.
Tom Lane [Wed, 20 Jan 2010 23:12:15 +0000 (23:12 +0000)]
Well, the systemtap guys moved the goalposts again: with the latest version,
we *must* generate probes.o or the dtrace probes don't work. Revert our
workaround for their previous bug. Details at
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=557266
Tom Lane [Tue, 19 Jan 2010 18:39:26 +0000 (18:39 +0000)]
When doing a parallel restore, we must guard against out-of-range dependency
dump IDs, because the array we're using is sized according to the highest
dump ID actually defined in the archive file. In a partial dump there could
be references to higher dump IDs that weren't dumped. Treat these the same
as references to in-range IDs that weren't dumped. (The whole thing is a
bit scary because the missing objects might have been part of dependency
chains, which we won't know about. Not much we can do though --- throwing
an error is probably overreaction.)
Also, reject parallel restore with pre-1.8 archive version (made by pre-8.0
pg_dump). In these old versions the dependency entries are OIDs, not dump
IDs, and we don't have enough information to interpret them.
Tom Lane [Mon, 18 Jan 2010 18:17:52 +0000 (18:17 +0000)]
Fix an oversight in convert_EXISTS_sublink_to_join: we can't convert an
EXISTS that contains a WITH clause. This would usually lead to a
"could not find CTE" error later in planning, because the WITH wouldn't
get processed at all. Noted while playing with an example from Ken Marshall.
Tom Lane [Mon, 18 Jan 2010 02:30:30 +0000 (02:30 +0000)]
Fix portalmem.c to avoid keeping a dangling pointer to a cached plan list
after it's released its reference count for the cached plan. There are
code paths that might try to examine the plan list before noticing that
the portal is already in aborted state. Report and diagnosis by Tatsuo
Ishii, though this isn't exactly his proposed patch.
Tom Lane [Sat, 16 Jan 2010 19:50:38 +0000 (19:50 +0000)]
Re-order configure tests to reflect the fact that the code generated for
posix_fadvise and other file-related functions can depend on _LARGEFILE_SOURCE
and/or _FILE_OFFSET_BITS. Per report from Robert Treat.
Back-patch to 8.4. This has been wrong all along, but we weren't really using
posix_fadvise in anger before, and AC_FUNC_FSEEKO seems to mask the issue well
enough for that function.
Tom Lane [Wed, 13 Jan 2010 23:07:15 +0000 (23:07 +0000)]
When loading critical system indexes into the relcache, ensure we lock the
underlying catalog not only the index itself. Otherwise, if the cache
load process touches the catalog (which will happen for many though not
all of these indexes), we are locking index before parent table, which can
result in a deadlock against processes that are trying to lock them in the
normal order. Per today's failure on buildfarm member gothic_moth; it's
surprising the problem hadn't been identified before.
Back-patch to 8.2. Earlier releases didn't have the issue because they
didn't try to lock these indexes during load (instead assuming that they
couldn't change schema at all during multiuser operation).
Tom Lane [Wed, 13 Jan 2010 16:57:03 +0000 (16:57 +0000)]
Fix bug #5269: ResetPlanCache mustn't invalidate cached utility statements,
especially not ROLLBACK. ROLLBACK might need to be executed in an already
aborted transaction, when there is no safe way to revalidate the plan. But
in general there's no point in marking utility statements invalid, since
they have no plans in the normal sense of the word; so we might as well
work a bit harder here to avoid future revalidation cycles.
Tom Lane [Tue, 12 Jan 2010 18:12:26 +0000 (18:12 +0000)]
Fix relcache reload mechanism to be more robust in the face of errors
occurring during a reload, such as query-cancel. Instead of zeroing out
an existing relcache entry and rebuilding it in place, build a new relcache
entry, then swap its contents with the old one, then free the new entry.
This avoids problems with code believing that a previously obtained pointer
to a cache entry must still reference a valid entry, as seen in recent
failures on buildfarm member jaguar. (jaguar is using CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS
which raises the probability of failure substantially, but the problem
could occur in the field without that.) The previous design was okay
when it was made, but subtransactions and the ResourceOwner mechanism
make it unsafe now.
Also, make more use of the already existing rd_isvalid flag, so that we
remember that the entry requires rebuilding even if the first attempt fails.
Back-patch as far as 8.2. Prior versions have enough issues around relcache
reload anyway (due to inadequate locking) that fixing this one doesn't seem
worthwhile.
Tom Lane [Mon, 11 Jan 2010 15:31:12 +0000 (15:31 +0000)]
Improve ExecEvalVar's handling of whole-row variables in cases where the
rowtype contains dropped columns. Sometimes the input tuple will be formed
from a select targetlist in which dropped columns are filled with a NULL
of an arbitrary type (the planner typically uses INT4, since it can't tell
what type the dropped column really was). So we need to relax the rowtype
compatibility check to not insist on physical compatibility if the actual
column value is NULL.
In principle we might need to do this for functions returning composite
types, too (see tupledesc_match()). In practice there doesn't seem to be
a bug there, probably because the function will be using the same cached
rowtype descriptor as the caller. Fixing that code path would require
significant rearrangement, so I left it alone for now.
Magnus Hagander [Sun, 10 Jan 2010 15:54:14 +0000 (15:54 +0000)]
Update Windows installation notes.
pginstaller isn't used anymore, in favor of the one-click installers.
Make it clear that we support Windows 2000 and newer with the native
port, instead of first saying we support NT4 and then saying we don't.
Tom Lane [Thu, 7 Jan 2010 19:53:16 +0000 (19:53 +0000)]
Make bit/varbit substring() treat any negative length as meaning "all the rest
of the string". The previous coding treated only -1 that way, and would
produce an invalid result value for other negative values.
We ought to fix it so that 2-parameter bit substring() is a different C
function and the 3-parameter form throws error for negative length, but
that takes a pg_proc change which is impractical in the back branches;
and in any case somebody might be relying on -1 working this way.
So just do this as a back-patchable fix.
Tom Lane [Thu, 7 Jan 2010 00:25:18 +0000 (00:25 +0000)]
Alter the configure script to fail immediately if the C compiler does not
provide a working 64-bit integer datatype. As recently noted, we've been
broken on such platforms since early in the 8.4 development cycle. Since
it took nearly two years for anyone to even notice, it seems that the
rationale for continuing to support such platforms has reached the point
of non-existence. Rather than thrashing around to try to make it work
again, we'll just admit up front that this no longer works.
Back-patch to 8.4 since that branch is also broken.
We should go around to remove INT64_IS_BUSTED support, but just in HEAD,
so that seems like material for a separate commit.
Tom Lane [Tue, 5 Jan 2010 23:25:44 +0000 (23:25 +0000)]
Add support for doing FULL JOIN ON FALSE. While this is really a rather
peculiar variant of UNION ALL, and so wouldn't likely get written directly
as-is, it's possible for it to arise as a result of simplification of
less-obviously-silly queries. In particular, now that we can do flattening
of subqueries that have constant outputs and are underneath an outer join,
it's possible for the case to result from simplification of queries of the
type exhibited in bug #5263. Back-patch to 8.4 to avoid a functionality
regression for this type of query.
Magnus Hagander [Fri, 1 Jan 2010 14:57:19 +0000 (14:57 +0000)]
Make the win32 putenv() override update *all* present versions of the
MSVCRxx runtime, not just the current + Visual Studio 6 (MSVCRT). Clearly
there can be an almost unlimited number of runtimes loaded at the same
time.
Tom Lane [Wed, 30 Dec 2009 03:45:53 +0000 (03:45 +0000)]
Set errno to zero before invoking SSL_read or SSL_write. It appears that
at least in some Windows versions, these functions are capable of returning
a failure indication without setting errno. That puts us into an infinite
loop if the previous value happened to be EINTR. Per report from Brendan
Hill.
Back-patch to 8.2. We could take it further back, but since this is only
known to be an issue on Windows and we don't support Windows before 8.2,
it does not seem worth the trouble.
Previous fix for temporary file management broke returning a set from
PL/pgSQL function within an exception handler. Make sure we use the right
resource owner when we create the tuplestore to hold returned tuples.
Simplify tuplestore API so that the caller doesn't need to be in the right
memory context when calling tuplestore_put* functions. tuplestore.c
automatically switches to the memory context used when the tuplestore was
created. Tuplesort was already modified like this earlier. This patch also
removes the now useless MemoryContextSwitch calls from callers.
Report by Aleksei on pgsql-bugs on Dec 22 2009. Backpatch to 8.1, like
the previous patch that broke this.
Tom Lane [Thu, 24 Dec 2009 17:52:11 +0000 (17:52 +0000)]
Fix wrong WAL info value generated when gistContinueInsert() performs an
index page split. This would result in index corruption, or even more likely
an error during WAL replay, if we were unlucky enough to crash during
end-of-recovery cleanup after having completed an incomplete GIST insertion.
Always pass catalog id to the options validator function specified in
CREATE FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER. Arguably it wasn't a bug because the
documentation said that it's passed the catalog ID or zero, but surely
we should provide it when it's known. And there isn't currently any
scenario where it's not known, and I can't imagine having one in the
future either, so better remove the "or zero" escape hatch and always
pass a valid catalog ID. Backpatch to 8.4.
Tom Lane [Wed, 16 Dec 2009 22:24:19 +0000 (22:24 +0000)]
Avoid a premature coercion failure in transformSetOperationTree() when
presented with an UNKNOWN-type Var, which can happen in cases where an
unknown literal appeared in a subquery. While many such cases will fail
later on anyway in the planner, there are some cases where the planner is
able to flatten the query and replace the Var by the constant before it has
to coerce the union column to the final type. I had added this check in 8.4
to provide earlier/better error detection, but it causes a regression for
some cases that worked OK before. Fix by not making the check if the input
node is UNKNOWN type and not a Const or Param. If it isn't going to work,
it will fail anyway at plan time, with the only real loss being inability to
provide an error cursor. Per gripe from Britt Piehler.
In passing, rename a couple of variables to remove confusion from an
inner scope masking the same variable names in an outer scope.
Tom Lane [Mon, 14 Dec 2009 02:16:04 +0000 (02:16 +0000)]
Fix a bug introduced when set-returning SQL functions were made inline-able:
we have to cope with the possibility that the declared result rowtype contains
dropped columns. This fails in 8.4, as per bug #5240.
While at it, be more paranoid about inserting binary coercions when inlining.
The pre-8.4 code did not really need to worry about that because it could not
inline at all in any case where an added coercion could change the behavior
of the function's statement. However, when inlining a SRF we allow sorting,
grouping, and set-ops such as UNION. In these cases, modifying one of the
targetlist entries that the sort/group/setop depends on could conceivably
change the behavior of the function's statement --- so don't inline when
such a case applies.
Tom Lane [Sat, 12 Dec 2009 19:24:44 +0000 (19:24 +0000)]
Fix integer-to-bit-string conversions to handle the first fractional byte
correctly when the output bit width is wider than the given integer by
something other than a multiple of 8 bits.
This has been wrong since I first wrote that code for 8.0 :-(. Kudos to
Roman Kononov for being the first to notice, though I didn't use his
patch. Per bug #5237.
Tom Lane [Wed, 9 Dec 2009 21:58:04 +0000 (21:58 +0000)]
Prevent indirect security attacks via changing session-local state within
an allegedly immutable index function. It was previously recognized that
we had to prevent such a function from executing SET/RESET ROLE/SESSION
AUTHORIZATION, or it could trivially obtain the privileges of the session
user. However, since there is in general no privilege checking for changes
of session-local state, it is also possible for such a function to change
settings in a way that might subvert later operations in the same session.
Examples include changing search_path to cause an unexpected function to
be called, or replacing an existing prepared statement with another one
that will execute a function of the attacker's choosing.
The present patch secures VACUUM, ANALYZE, and CREATE INDEX/REINDEX against
these threats, which are the same places previously deemed to need protection
against the SET ROLE issue. GUC changes are still allowed, since there are
many useful cases for that, but we prevent security problems by forcing a
rollback of any GUC change after completing the operation. Other cases are
handled by throwing an error if any change is attempted; these include temp
table creation, closing a cursor, and creating or deleting a prepared
statement. (In 7.4, the infrastructure to roll back GUC changes doesn't
exist, so we settle for rejecting changes of "search_path" in these contexts.)
Original report and patch by Gurjeet Singh, additional analysis by
Tom Lane.
Magnus Hagander [Wed, 9 Dec 2009 06:37:29 +0000 (06:37 +0000)]
Reject certificates with embedded NULLs in the commonName field. This stops
attacks where an attacker would put <attack>\0<propername> in the field and
trick the validation code that the certificate was for <attack>.
This is a very low risk attack since it reuqires the attacker to trick the
CA into issuing a certificate with an incorrect field, and the common
PostgreSQL deployments are with private CAs, and not external ones. Also,
default mode in 8.4 does not do any name validation, and is thus also not
vulnerable - but the higher security modes are.
Backpatch all the way. Even though versions 8.3.x and before didn't have
certificate name validation support, they still exposed this field for
the user to perform the validation in the application code, and there
is no way to detect this problem through that API.
Tom Lane [Wed, 9 Dec 2009 00:35:59 +0000 (00:35 +0000)]
Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2009s: DST law changes in
Antarctica, Argentina, Bangladesh, Fiji, Novokuznetsk, Pakistan, Palestine,
Samoa, Syria. Also historical corrections for Hong Kong.
Fix bug in temporary file management with subtransactions. A cursor opened
in a subtransaction stays open even if the subtransaction is aborted, so
any temporary files related to it must stay alive as well. With the patch,
we use ResourceOwners to track open temporary files and don't automatically
close them at subtransaction end (though in the normal case temporary files
are registered with the subtransaction resource owner and will therefore be
closed).
At end of top transaction, we still check that there's no temporary files
marked as close-at-end-of-transaction open, but that's now just a debugging
cross-check as the resource owner cleanup should've closed them already.
Tom Lane [Wed, 2 Dec 2009 17:41:07 +0000 (17:41 +0000)]
Ignore attempts to set "application_name" in the connection startup packet.
This avoids a useless connection retry and complaint in the postmaster log
when receiving a connection from 8.5 or later libpq.
Backpatch in all supported branches, but of course *not* HEAD.
Tom Lane [Sun, 29 Nov 2009 21:02:22 +0000 (21:02 +0000)]
Fix session-lifespan memory leak when a plperl function is redefined:
we have to tell Perl it can release its compiled copy of the function
text. Noted by Alexey Klyukin.
Back-patch to 8.2 --- the problem exists further back, but this patch
won't work without modification, and it's probably not worth the trouble.
Fix an old bug in multixact and two-phase commit. Prepared transactions can
be part of multixacts, so allocate a slot for each prepared transaction in
the "oldest member" array in multixact.c. On PREPARE TRANSACTION, transfer
the oldest member value from the current backends slot to the prepared xact
slot. Also save and recover the value from the 2pc state file.
The symptom of the bug was that after a transaction prepared, a shared lock
still held by the prepared transaction was sometimes ignored by other
transactions.
Fix back to 8.1, where both 2PC and multixact were introduced.
Tom Lane [Sat, 21 Nov 2009 05:44:12 +0000 (05:44 +0000)]
Refactor ecpg grammar so that it uses the core grammar's unreserved_keyword
list, minus a few specific words that have to be treated specially. This
replaces a hard-wired list of keywords that would have needed manual
maintenance, and was not getting it. The 8.4 coding was already missing
these words, causing ecpg to incorrectly treat them as reserved words:
CALLED, CATALOG, DEFINER, ENUM, FOLLOWING, INVOKER, OPTIONS, PARTITION,
PRECEDING, RANGE, SECURITY, SERVER, UNBOUNDED, WRAPPER. In HEAD we were
additionally missing COMMENTS, FUNCTIONS, SEQUENCES, TABLES.
Per gripe from Bosco Rama.
Tom Lane [Fri, 20 Nov 2009 20:54:20 +0000 (20:54 +0000)]
Fix display and dumping of UPDATE OR TRUNCATE triggers (a bizarre combination
maybe, but we should get it right). Bug noted while reviewing TRIGGER WHEN
patch. Already fixed in HEAD.
Tom Lane [Thu, 19 Nov 2009 02:45:40 +0000 (02:45 +0000)]
Fix memory leak in syslogger: logfile_rotate() would leak a copy of the
output filename if CSV logging was enabled and only one of the two possible
output files got rotated during a particular call (which would, in fact,
typically be the case during a size-based rotation). This would amount to
about MAXPGPATH (1KB) per rotation, and it's been there since the CSV
code was put in, so it's surprising that nobody noticed it before.
Per bug #5196 from Thomas Poindessous.
Tom Lane [Mon, 16 Nov 2009 18:04:47 +0000 (18:04 +0000)]
While doing the final setrefs.c pass over a plan tree, try to match up
non-Var sort/group expressions using ressortgroupref labels instead of
depending entirely on equal()-ity of the upper node's tlist expressions
to the lower node's. This avoids emitting the wrong outputs in cases
where there are textually identical volatile sort/group expressions,
as for example
select distinct random(),random() from generate_series(1,10);
Per report from Andrew Gierth.
Backpatch to 8.4. Arguably this is wrong all the way back, but the only known
case where there's an observable problem is when using hash aggregation to
implement DISTINCT, which is new as of 8.4. So for the moment I'll refrain
from backpatching further.
A better fix for the "ARRAY[...]::domain" problem. The previous patch worked,
but the transformed ArrayExpr claimed to have a return type of "domain",
even though the domain constraint was only checked by the enclosing
CoerceToDomain node. With this fix, the ArrayExpr is correctly labeled with
the base type of the domain. Per gripe by Tom Lane.
When you do "ARRAY[...]::domain", where domain is a domain over an array type,
we need to check domain constraints. We used to do it correctly, but 8.4
introduced a separate code path for the "ARRAY[]::arraytype" case to infer
the type of an empty ARRAY construct from the cast target, and forgot to take
domains into account.
Teodor Sigaev [Fri, 13 Nov 2009 11:17:22 +0000 (11:17 +0000)]
Fix multicolumn GIN's wrong results with fastupdate enabled.
User-defined consistent functions believes the check array
contains at least one true element which was not a true for
scanning pending list.
Tom Lane [Tue, 10 Nov 2009 23:12:21 +0000 (23:12 +0000)]
Do not build psql's flex module on its own, but instead include it in
mainloop.c. This ensures that postgres_fe.h is read before including
any system headers, which is necessary to avoid problems on some platforms
where we make nondefault selections of feature macros for stdio.h or
other headers. We have had this policy for flex modules in the backend
for many years, but for some reason it was not applied to psql.
Per trouble report from Alexandra Roy and diagnosis by Albe Laurenz.
Alvaro Herrera [Tue, 10 Nov 2009 18:00:30 +0000 (18:00 +0000)]
Fix longstanding problems in VACUUM caused by untimely interruptions
In VACUUM FULL, an interrupt after the initial transaction has been recorded
as committed can cause postmaster to restart with the following error message:
PANIC: cannot abort transaction NNNN, it was already committed
This problem has been reported many times.
In lazy VACUUM, an interrupt after the table has been truncated by
lazy_truncate_heap causes other backends' relcache to still point to the
removed pages; this can cause future INSERT and UPDATE queries to error out
with the following error message:
could not read block XX of relation 1663/NNN/MMMM: read only 0 of 8192 bytes
The window to this race condition is extremely narrow, but it has been seen in
the wild involving a cancelled autovacuum process.
The solution for both problems is to inhibit interrupts in both operations
until after the respective transactions have been committed. It's not a
complete solution, because the transaction could theoretically be aborted by
some other error, but at least fixes the most common causes of both problems.
Tom Lane [Thu, 5 Nov 2009 04:38:35 +0000 (04:38 +0000)]
Allow binary-coercible cases in ri_HashCompareOp; there are some such cases
that are not handled by find_coercion_pathway, notably composite->RECORD.
Now that 8.4 supports composites as primary keys, it's worth dealing with
this case.
Disable triggering failover with a signal in pg_standby on Windows, because
Windows doesn't do signal processing like other platforms do. It never
really worked, but recent changes to the signal handling made it crash.
In PLy_output(), when the elog() call in the TRY branch throws an exception
(this can happen when a statement timeout kicks in, for example), the
PyErr_SetString() call in the CATCH branch can cause a segfault, because the
Py_XDECREF(so) call before it releases memory that is still used by the sv
variable that PyErr_SetString() uses as argument, because sv points into
memory owned by so.
Backpatched back to 8.0, where this code was introduced.
I also threw in a couple of volatile declarations for variables that are used
before and after the TRY. I don't think they caused the crash that I
observed, but they could become issues.
Tom Lane [Sun, 1 Nov 2009 22:31:02 +0000 (22:31 +0000)]
Dept of second thoughts: after studying index_getnext() a bit more I realize
that it can scribble on scan->xs_ctup.t_self while following HOT chains,
so we can't rely on that to stay valid between hashgettuple() calls.
Introduce a private variable in HashScanOpaque, instead.