Add new keywords SNAPSHOT and TYPES to the keyword list in gram.y
These were added to kwlist.h as unreserved keywords in separate patches,
but authors forgot to add them to the corresponding list in gram.y.
Because of that, even though they were supposed to be unreserved keywords,
they could not be used as identifiers. src/tools/check_keywords.pl is your
friend.
Tom Lane [Wed, 8 Feb 2012 20:23:00 +0000 (15:23 -0500)]
Fix up dumping conditions for extension configuration tables.
Various filters that were meant to prevent dumping of table data were not
being applied to extension config tables, notably --exclude-table-data and
--no-unlogged-table-data. We also would bogusly try to dump data from
views, sequences, or foreign tables, should an extension try to claim they
were config tables. Fix all that, and refactor/redocument to try to make
this a bit less fragile. This reverts the implementation, though not the
feature, of commit 7b070e896ca835318c90b02c830a5c4844413b64, which had
broken config-table dumping altogether :-(.
It is still the case that the code will dump config-table data even if
--schema is specified. That behavior was intentional, as per the comments
in getExtensionMembership, so I think it requires some more discussion
before we change it.
Tom Lane [Wed, 8 Feb 2012 18:15:02 +0000 (13:15 -0500)]
Check misplaced window functions before checking aggregate/group by sanity.
If somebody puts a window function in WHERE, we should complain about that
in so many words. The previous coding tended to complain about the window
function's arguments instead, which is likely to be misleading to users who
are unclear on the semantics of window functions; as seen for example in
bug #6440 from Matyas Novak.
Just another example of how "add new code at the end" is frequently a bad
heuristic.
Tom Lane [Wed, 8 Feb 2012 17:41:48 +0000 (12:41 -0500)]
Support min/max index optimizations on boolean columns.
Since bool_and() is equivalent to min(), and bool_or() to max(), we might
as well let them be index-optimized in the same way. The practical value
of this is debatable at best, but it seems nearly cost-free to enable it.
Code-wise, we need only adjust the entries in pg_aggregate. There is a
measurable planning speed penalty for a query involving one of these
aggregates, but it is only a few percent in simple cases, so that seems
acceptable.
Tom Lane [Wed, 8 Feb 2012 16:29:29 +0000 (11:29 -0500)]
Mark some more I/O-conversion-invoking functions as stable not volatile.
When written, textanycat, anytextcat, quote_literal, and quote_nullable
were marked volatile, because they could invoke arbitrary type-specific
output functions as part of casting their anyelement arguments to text.
Since then, we have defined a project policy that I/O functions must not
be volatile, as per commit aab353a60b95aadc00f81da0c6d99bde696c4b75.
So these functions can safely be downgraded to stable. Most of the time
this makes no difference since they'll get inlined anyway, but as noted
by Andrew Dunstan, there are cases where the volatile marking prevents
optimizations that the planner does before function inlining. (I think
I might have overlooked these functions in the earlier commit on the
grounds that inlining would make it moot, but not so --- tgl)
This change results in a change in the expected output of the json
regression tests, because the planner can now flatten a sub-select
that it failed to before. The old output is preferable, but getting
that back will require some as-yet-unfinished work on RowExpr handling.
pg_regress: Use target-specific variable instead of overriding make rule
Use a target-specific variable to add to CPPFLAGS instead of writing a
custom .c -> .o rule. This will ensure that dependency tracking is
used when enabled.
Robert Haas [Tue, 7 Feb 2012 18:45:46 +0000 (13:45 -0500)]
Support fls().
The immediate impetus for this is that Noah Misch's patch to elide
unnecessary table and index rebuilds when changing typmod for temporal
types uses it; and this is extracted from that patch, with some
further commentary by me. But it seems logically separate from the
remainder of the patch, so I'm committing it separately; this is not
the first time someone has wanted fls() in the backend and probably
won't be the last.
If we end up using this in more performance-critical spots it may be
worthwhile to add some architecture-specific optimizations to our
src/port version of fls() - e.g. any x86 platform can implement this
using the assembly instruction BSRL. But performance won't matter
a bit for assessing typmod changes, so I'm not worried about that
right now.
Robert Haas [Tue, 7 Feb 2012 17:41:42 +0000 (12:41 -0500)]
Add a transform function for varbit typmod coercisions.
This enables ALTER TABLE to skip table and index rebuilds when the
new type is unconstraint varbit, or when the allowable number of bits
is not decreasing.
Noah Misch, with review and a fix for an OID collision by me.
Robert Haas [Tue, 7 Feb 2012 17:08:26 +0000 (12:08 -0500)]
Add a transform function for numeric typmod coercisions.
This enables ALTER TABLE to skip table and index rebuilds when a column
is changed to an unconstrained numeric, or when the scale is unchanged
and the precision does not decrease.
Noah Misch, with a few stylistic changes and a fix for an OID
collision by me.
Robert Haas [Tue, 7 Feb 2012 16:23:04 +0000 (11:23 -0500)]
Add TIMING option to EXPLAIN, to allow eliminating of timing overhead.
Sometimes it may be useful to get actual row counts out of EXPLAIN
(ANALYZE) without paying the cost of timing every node entry/exit.
With this patch, you can say EXPLAIN (ANALYZE, TIMING OFF) to get that.
Tomas Vondra, reviewed by Eric Theise, with minor doc changes by me.
Robert Haas [Tue, 7 Feb 2012 15:07:02 +0000 (10:07 -0500)]
pg_dump: Further reduce reliance on global variables.
This is another round of refactoring to make things simpler for parallel
pg_dump. pg_dump.c now issues SQL queries through the relevant Archive
object, rather than relying on the global variable g_conn. This commit
isn't quite enough to get rid of g_conn entirely, but it makes a big
dent in its utilization and, along the way, manages to be slightly less
code than before.
When building with LWLOCK_STATS, initialize the stats in LWLockWaitUntilFree.
If LWLockWaitUntilFree was called before the first LWLockAcquire call, you
would either crash because of access to uninitialized array or account the
acquisition incorrectly. LWLockConditionalAcquire doesn't have this problem
because it doesn't update the lwlock stats.
In practice, this never happens because there is no codepath where you would
call LWLockWaitUntilfree before LWLockAcquire after a new process is
launched. But that's just accidental, there's no guarantee that that's
always going to be true in the future.
Tom Lane [Mon, 6 Feb 2012 20:29:26 +0000 (15:29 -0500)]
Fix postmaster to attempt restart after a hot-standby crash.
The postmaster was coded to treat any unexpected exit of the startup
process (i.e., the WAL replay process) as a catastrophic crash, and not try
to restart it. This was OK so long as the startup process could not have
any sibling postmaster children. However, if a hot-standby backend
crashes, we SIGQUIT the startup process along with everything else, and the
resulting exit is hardly "unexpected". Treating it as such meant we failed
to restart a standby server after any child crash at all, not only a crash
of the WAL replay process as intended. Adjust that. Back-patch to 9.0
where hot standby was introduced.
Tom Lane [Mon, 6 Feb 2012 19:43:58 +0000 (14:43 -0500)]
Avoid throwing ERROR during WAL replay of DROP TABLESPACE.
Although we will not even issue an XLOG_TBLSPC_DROP WAL record unless
removal of the tablespace's directories succeeds, that does not guarantee
that the same operation will succeed during WAL replay. Foreseeable
reasons for it to fail include temp files created in the tablespace by Hot
Standby backends, wrong directory permissions on a standby server, etc etc.
The original coding threw ERROR if replay failed to remove the directories,
but that is a serious overreaction. Throwing an error aborts recovery,
and worse means that manual intervention will be needed to get the database
to start again, since otherwise the same error will recur on subsequent
attempts to replay the same WAL record. And the consequence of failing to
remove the directories is only that some probably-small amount of disk
space is wasted, so it hardly seems justified to throw an error.
Accordingly, arrange to report such failures as LOG messages and keep going
when a failure occurs during replay.
Back-patch to 9.0 where Hot Standby was introduced. In principle such
problems can occur in earlier releases, but Hot Standby increases the odds
of trouble significantly. Given the lack of field reports of such issues,
I'm satisfied with patching back as far as the patch applies easily.
Robert Haas [Mon, 6 Feb 2012 19:07:55 +0000 (14:07 -0500)]
pg_dump: Remove global Archive pointer.
Instead, everything that needs the Archive object now gets it as a
parameter. This is necessary infrastructure for parallel pg_dump,
but is also amply justified by the ugliness of the current code
(though a lot more than this is needed to fix that problem).
Robert Haas [Mon, 6 Feb 2012 17:52:36 +0000 (12:52 -0500)]
pg_dump: Reduce dependencies on global variables.
Change various places in the code that are referencing the global
Archive object g_fout to instead reference the Archive object fout
which is already being passed as a parameter. For parallel pg_dump to
work, we're going to need multiple Archive(Handle) objects, so the
real solution here is to pass down the Archive object to everywhere
that it needs to go, but we might as well pick the low-hanging fruit
first.
Tom Lane [Mon, 6 Feb 2012 17:34:10 +0000 (12:34 -0500)]
Add locking around WAL-replay modification of shared-memory variables.
Originally, most of this code assumed that no Postgres backends could be
running concurrently with it, and so no locking could be needed. That
assumption fails in Hot Standby. While it's still true that Hot Standby
backends should never change values like nextXid, they can examine them,
and consistency is important in some cases such as when computing a
snapshot. Therefore, prudence requires that WAL replay code obtain the
relevant locks when modifying such variables, even though it can examine
them without taking a lock. We were following that coding rule in some
places but not all. This commit applies the coding rule uniformly to all
updates of ShmemVariableCache and MultiXactState fields; a search of the
replay routines did not find any other cases that seemed to be at risk.
In addition, this commit fixes a longstanding thinko in replay of NEXTOID
and checkpoint records: we tried to advance nextOid only if it was behind
the value in the WAL record, but the comparison would draw the wrong
conclusion if OID wraparound had occurred since the previous value.
Better to just unconditionally assign the new value, since OID assignment
shouldn't be happening during replay anyway.
The additional locking seems to be more in the nature of future-proofing
than fixing any live bug, so I am not going to back-patch it. The NEXTOID
fix will be back-patched separately.
Tom Lane [Sun, 5 Feb 2012 20:49:17 +0000 (15:49 -0500)]
Fix transient clobbering of shared buffers during WAL replay.
RestoreBkpBlocks was in the habit of zeroing and refilling the target
buffer; which was perfectly safe when the code was written, but is unsafe
during Hot Standby operation. The reason is that we have coding rules
that allow backends to continue accessing a tuple in a heap relation while
holding only a pin on its buffer. Such a backend could see transiently
zeroed data, if WAL replay had occasion to change other data on the page.
This has been shown to be the cause of bug #6425 from Duncan Rance (who
deserves kudos for developing a sufficiently-reproducible test case) as
well as Bridget Frey's re-report of bug #6200. It most likely explains the
original report as well, though we don't yet have confirmation of that.
To fix, change the code so that only bytes that are supposed to change will
change, even transiently. This actually saves cycles in RestoreBkpBlocks,
since it's not writing the same bytes twice.
Also fix seq_redo, which has the same disease, though it has to work a bit
harder to meet the requirement.
So far as I can tell, no other WAL replay routines have this type of bug.
In particular, the index-related replay routines, which would certainly be
broken if they had to meet the same standard, are not at risk because we
do not have coding rules that allow access to an index page when not
holding a buffer lock on it.
Tom Lane [Sun, 5 Feb 2012 03:32:35 +0000 (22:32 -0500)]
Add missing Assert and fix inaccurate elog message in standby_redo().
All other WAL redo routines either call RestoreBkpBlocks() or Assert that
they haven't been passed any backup blocks. Make this one do likewise.
Also, fix incorrect routine name in its failure message.
Tom Lane [Sat, 4 Feb 2012 20:52:09 +0000 (15:52 -0500)]
Revert "Add some regression test cases for denormalized float8 input."
This reverts commit 500cf66d5522b39ddfdc26b309f8b5b0e385f42e. As was
more or less expected, a small minority of platforms won't accept
denormalized input even with the recent changes. It doesn't seem
especially helpful to test this if we're going to have to provide an
alternate expected-file to allow failure.
Further improve on commit c75e1436467f32a06b5ab9d594d2a390e7f4594d.
Instead of building both .o files and binaries in the same make rule,
just rely on the normal .c -> .o rule. This will ensure that
dependency tracking is used when enabled. To do this, disable the
implicit direct .c -> binary rule globally, which will also prevent
the original problem (*.dSYM junk) from reappearing elsewhere.
Robert Haas [Thu, 2 Feb 2012 01:35:42 +0000 (20:35 -0500)]
Avoid re-checking for visibility map extension too frequently.
When testing bits (but not when setting or clearing them), we now
won't check whether the map has been extended. This significantly
improves performance in the case where the visibility map doesn't
exist yet, by avoiding an extra system call per tuple. To make
sure backends notice eventually, send an smgr inval on VM extension.
Tom Lane [Wed, 1 Feb 2012 18:11:16 +0000 (13:11 -0500)]
Try to be more consistent about accepting denormalized float8 numbers.
On some platforms, strtod() reports ERANGE for a denormalized value (ie,
one that can be represented as distinct from zero, but is too small to have
full precision). On others, it doesn't. It seems better to try to accept
these values consistently, so add a test to see if the result value
indicates a true out-of-range condition. This should be okay per Single
Unix Spec. On machines where the underlying math isn't IEEE standard, the
behavior for such small numbers may not be very consistent, but then it
wouldn't be anyway.
Marti Raudsepp, after a proposal by Jeroen Vermeulen
Alvaro Herrera [Wed, 1 Feb 2012 16:56:59 +0000 (13:56 -0300)]
Implement dry-run mode for pg_archivecleanup
In dry-run mode, just the name of the file to be removed is printed to
stdout; this is so the user can easily plug it into another program
through a pipe. If debug mode is also specified, a more verbose message
is printed to stderr.
Tom Lane [Wed, 1 Feb 2012 07:14:37 +0000 (02:14 -0500)]
Code review for plpgsql fn_signature patch.
Don't quote the output of format_procedure(); it's already quoted quite
enough. Remove the fn_name field, which was now just dead weight. Fix
remaining expected-output files.
Robert Haas [Tue, 31 Jan 2012 16:48:23 +0000 (11:48 -0500)]
Built-in JSON data type.
Like the XML data type, we simply store JSON data as text, after checking
that it is valid. More complex operations such as canonicalization and
comparison may come later, but this is enough for not.
There are a few open issues here, such as whether we should attempt to
detect UTF-8 surrogate pairs represented as \uXXXX\uYYYY, but this gets
the basic framework in place.
Fix bug in the new wait-until-lwlock-is-free mechanism.
If there was a wait-until-free process in the head of the wait queue,
followed by an exclusive locker, the exclusive locker was not be woken up
as it should.
Peter Eisentraut [Mon, 30 Jan 2012 19:45:42 +0000 (21:45 +0200)]
Add sequence USAGE privileges to information schema
The sequence USAGE privilege is sufficiently similar to the SQL
standard that it seems reasonable to show in the information schema.
Also add some compatibility notes about it on the GRANT reference
page.
Peter Eisentraut [Mon, 30 Jan 2012 19:38:52 +0000 (21:38 +0200)]
PL/Python: Add result metadata functions
Add result object functions .colnames, .coltypes, .coltypmods to
obtain information about the result column names and types, which was
previously not possible in the PL/Python SPI interface.
Peter Eisentraut [Mon, 30 Jan 2012 19:34:00 +0000 (21:34 +0200)]
Use abort() instead of exit() to abort library functions
In some hopeless situations, certain library functions in libpq and
libpgport quit the program. Use abort() for that instead of exit(),
so we don't interfere with the normal exit codes the program might
use, we clearly signal the abnormal termination, and the caller has a
chance of catching the termination.
This was originally pointed out by Debian's Lintian program.
When a backend needs to flush the WAL, and someone else is already flushing
the WAL, wait until it releases the WALInsertLock and check if we still need
to do the flush or if the other backend already did the work for us, before
acquiring WALInsertLock. This helps group commit, because when the WAL flush
finishes, all the backends that were waiting for it can be woken up in one
go, and the can all concurrently observe that they're done, rather than
waking them up one by one in a cascading fashion.
This is based on a new LWLock function, LWLockWaitUntilFree(), which has
peculiar semantics. If the lock is immediately free, it grabs the lock and
returns true. If it's not free, it waits until it is released, but then
returns false without grabbing the lock. This is used in XLogFlush(), so
that when the lock is acquired, the backend flushes the WAL, but if it's
not, the backend first checks the current flush location before retrying.
Original patch and benchmarking by Peter Geoghegan and Simon Riggs, although
this patch as committed ended up being very different from that.
Accept a non-existent value in "ALTER USER/DATABASE SET ..." command.
When default_text_search_config, default_tablespace, or temp_tablespaces
setting is set per-user or per-database, with an "ALTER USER/DATABASE SET
..." statement, don't throw an error if the text search configuration or
tablespace does not exist. In case of text search configuration, even if
it doesn't exist in the current database, it might exist in another
database, where the setting is intended to have its effect. This behavior
is now the same as search_path's.
Tablespaces are cluster-wide, so the same argument doesn't hold for
tablespaces, but there's a problem with pg_dumpall: it dumps "ALTER USER
SET ..." statements before the "CREATE TABLESPACE" statements. Arguably
that's pg_dumpall's fault - it should dump the statements in such an order
that the tablespace is created first and then the "ALTER USER SET
default_tablespace ..." statements after that - but it seems better to be
consistent with search_path and default_text_search_config anyway. Besides,
you could still create a dump that throws an error, by creating the
tablespace, running "ALTER USER SET default_tablespace", then dropping the
tablespace and running pg_dumpall on that.
Tom Lane [Sun, 29 Jan 2012 23:37:14 +0000 (18:37 -0500)]
Tweak index costing for problems with partial indexes.
btcostestimate() makes an estimate of the number of index tuples that will
be visited based on knowledge of which index clauses can actually bound the
scan within nbtree. However, it forgot to account for partial indexes in
this calculation, with the result that the cost of the index scan could be
significantly overestimated for a partial index. Fix that by merging the
predicate with the abbreviated indexclause list, in the same way as we do
with the full list to estimate how many heap tuples will be visited.
Also, slightly increase the "fudge factor" that's meant to give preference
to smaller indexes over larger ones. While this is applied to all indexes,
it's most important for partial indexes since it can be the only factor
that makes a partial index look cheaper than a similar full index.
Experimentation shows that the existing value is so small as to easily get
swamped by noise such as page-boundary-roundoff behavior. I'm tempted to
kick it up more than this, but will refrain for now.
Per report from Ruben Blanco. These are long-standing issues, but given
the lack of prior complaints I'm not going to risk changing planner
behavior in back branches by back-patching.
Tom Lane [Sun, 29 Jan 2012 21:31:23 +0000 (16:31 -0500)]
Fix pushing of index-expression qualifications through UNION ALL.
In commit 57664ed25e5dea117158a2e663c29e60b3546e1c, I made the planner
wrap non-simple-variable outputs of appendrel children (IOW, child SELECTs
of UNION ALL subqueries) inside PlaceHolderVars, in order to solve some
issues with EquivalenceClass processing. However, this means that any
upper-level WHERE clauses mentioning such outputs will now contain
PlaceHolderVars after they're pushed down into the appendrel child,
and that prevents indxpath.c from recognizing that they could be matched
to index expressions. To fix, add explicit stripping of PlaceHolderVars
from index operands, same as we have long done for RelabelType nodes.
Add a regression test covering both this and the plain-UNION case (which
is a totally different code path, but should also be able to do it).
Per bug #6416 from Matteo Beccati. Back-patch to 9.1, same as the
previous change.
Tom Lane [Sun, 29 Jan 2012 01:24:42 +0000 (20:24 -0500)]
Fix handling of init_plans list in inheritance_planner().
Formerly we passed an empty list to each per-child-table invocation of
grouping_planner, and then merged the results into the global list.
However, that fails if there's a CTE attached to the statement, because
create_ctescan_plan uses the list to find the plan referenced by a CTE
reference; so it was unable to find any CTEs attached to the outer UPDATE
or DELETE. But there's no real reason not to use the same list throughout
the process, and doing so is simpler and faster anyway.
Per report from Josh Berkus of "could not find plan for CTE" failures.
Back-patch to 9.1 where we added support for WITH attached to UPDATE or
DELETE. Add some regression test cases, too.
Tom Lane [Sat, 28 Jan 2012 22:55:08 +0000 (17:55 -0500)]
Add simple tests of EvalPlanQual using the isolationtester infrastructure.
Much more could be done here, but at least now we have *some* automated
test coverage of that mechanism. In particular this tests the writable-CTE
case reported by Phil Sorber.
In passing, remove isolationtester's arbitrary restriction on the number of
steps in a permutation list. I used this so that a single spec file could
be used to run several related test scenarios, but there are other possible
reasons to want a step series that's not exactly a permutation. Improve
documentation and fix a couple other nits as well.
Tom Lane [Sat, 28 Jan 2012 22:43:57 +0000 (17:43 -0500)]
Fix handling of data-modifying CTE subplans in EvalPlanQual.
We can't just skip initializing such subplans, because the referencing CTE
node will expect to find the subplan available when it initializes. That
in turn means that ExecInitModifyTable must allow the case (which actually
it needed to do anyway, since there's no guarantee that ModifyTable is
exactly at the top of the CTE plan tree). So move the complaint about not
being allowed in EvalPlanQual mode to execution instead of initialization.
Testing turned up yet another problem, which is that we'd try to
re-initialize the result relation's index list, leading to leaks and
dangling pointers.
Per report from Phil Sorber. Back-patch to 9.1 where data-modifying CTEs
were introduced.
Tom Lane [Sat, 28 Jan 2012 04:09:16 +0000 (23:09 -0500)]
Fix error detection in contrib/pgcrypto's encrypt_iv() and decrypt_iv().
Due to oversights, the encrypt_iv() and decrypt_iv() functions failed to
report certain types of invalid-input errors, and would instead return
random garbage values.
Tom Lane [Sat, 28 Jan 2012 00:46:41 +0000 (19:46 -0500)]
Undo 8.4-era lobotomization of subquery pullup rules.
After the planner was fixed to convert some IN/EXISTS subqueries into
semijoins or antijoins, we had to prevent it from doing that in some
cases where the plans risked getting much worse. The reason the plans
got worse was that in the unoptimized implementation, subqueries could
reference parameters from the outer query at any join level, and so
full table scans could be avoided even if they were one or more levels
of join below where the semi/anti join would be. Now that we have
sufficient mechanism in the planner to handle such cases properly,
it should no longer be necessary to play dumb here.
This reverts commits 07b9936a0f10d746e5076239813a5e938f2f16be and cd1f0d04bf06938c0ee5728fc8424d62bcf2eef3. The latter was a stopgap
fix that wasn't really sufficiently analyzed at the time. Rather
than just restricting ourselves to cases where the new join can be
stacked on the right-hand input, we should also consider whether it
can be stacked on the left-hand input.
Tom Lane [Sat, 28 Jan 2012 00:26:38 +0000 (19:26 -0500)]
Use parameterized paths to generate inner indexscans more flexibly.
This patch fixes the planner so that it can generate nestloop-with-
inner-indexscan plans even with one or more levels of joining between
the indexscan and the nestloop join that is supplying the parameter.
The executor was fixed to handle such cases some time ago, but the
planner was not ready. This should improve our plans in many situations
where join ordering restrictions formerly forced complete table scans.
There is probably a fair amount of tuning work yet to be done, because
of various heuristics that have been added to limit the number of
parameterized paths considered. However, we are not going to find out
what needs to be adjusted until the code gets some real-world use, so
it's time to get it in there where it can be tested easily.
Note API change for index AM amcostestimate functions. I'm not aware of
any non-core index AMs, but if there are any, they will need minor
adjustments.
Peter Eisentraut [Fri, 27 Jan 2012 19:58:51 +0000 (21:58 +0200)]
Show default privileges in information schema
Hitherto, the information schema only showed explicitly granted
privileges that were visible in the *acl catalog columns. If no
privileges had been granted, the implicit privileges were not shown.
To fix that, add an SQL-accessible version of the acldefault()
function, and use that inside the aclexplode() calls to substitute the
catalog-specific default privilege set for null values.
Peter Eisentraut [Fri, 27 Jan 2012 19:39:38 +0000 (21:39 +0200)]
Revert unfortunate whitespace change
In e5e2fc842c418432756d8b5825ff107c6c5fc4c3, blank lines were removed
after a comment block, which now looks as though the comment refers to
the immediately following code, but it actually refers to the
preceding code. So put the blank lines back.
Peter Eisentraut [Fri, 27 Jan 2012 19:20:34 +0000 (21:20 +0200)]
Disallow ALTER DOMAIN on non-domain type everywhere
This has been the behavior already in most cases, but through
omission, ALTER DOMAIN / OWNER TO and ALTER DOMAIN / SET SCHEMA would
silently work on non-domain types as well.
Peter Eisentraut [Fri, 27 Jan 2012 18:16:17 +0000 (20:16 +0200)]
Hide most variable-length fields from Form_pg_* structs
Those fields only appear in the structs so that genbki.pl can create
the BKI bootstrap files for the catalogs. But they are not actually
usable from C. So hiding them can prevent coding mistakes, saves
stack space, and can help the compiler.
In certain catalogs, the first variable-length field has been kept
visible after manual inspection. These exceptions are noted in C
comments.
Peter Eisentraut [Fri, 27 Jan 2012 18:08:34 +0000 (20:08 +0200)]
Do not access indclass through Form_pg_index
Normally, accessing variable-length members of catalog structures past
the first one doesn't work at all. Here, it happened to work because
indnatts was checked to be 1, and so the defined FormData_pg_index
layout, using int2vector[1] and oidvector[1] for variable-length
arrays, happened to match the actual memory layout. But it's a very
fragile assumption, and it's not in a performance-critical path, so
code it properly using heap_getattr() instead.
Robert Haas [Thu, 26 Jan 2012 19:43:28 +0000 (14:43 -0500)]
Adjust tuplesort.c based on the fact that we never use the OS's qsort().
Our own qsort_arg() implementation doesn't have the defect previously
observed to affect only QNX 4, so it seems sufficiently to assert that
it isn't broken rather than retesting. Also, update a few comments to
clarify why it's valuable to retain a tie-break rule based on CTID
during index builds.
Robert Haas [Thu, 26 Jan 2012 17:44:30 +0000 (12:44 -0500)]
Be more clear when a new column name collides with a system column name.
We now use the same error message for ALTER TABLE .. ADD COLUMN or
ALTER TABLE .. RENAME COLUMN that we do for CREATE TABLE. The old
message was accurate, but might be confusing to users not aware of our
system columns.
Vik Reykja, with some changes by me, and further proofreading by Tom Lane
Make bgwriter sleep longer when it has no work to do, to save electricity.
To make it wake up promptly when activity starts again, backends nudge it
by setting a latch in MarkBufferDirty(). The latch is kept set while
bgwriter is active, so there is very little overhead from that when the
system is busy. It is only armed before going into longer sleep.
Robert Haas [Thu, 26 Jan 2012 13:21:31 +0000 (08:21 -0500)]
Damage control for yesterday's CheckIndexCompatible changes.
Rip out a regression test that doesn't play well with settings put in
place by the build farm, and rewrite the code in CheckIndexCompatible
in a hopefully more transparent style.
Alvaro Herrera [Wed, 25 Jan 2012 21:06:00 +0000 (18:06 -0300)]
Have \copy go through SendQuery
This enables a bunch of features, notably ON_ERROR_ROLLBACK. It also
makes COPY failure (either in the server or psql) as a whole behave more
sanely in psql.
Additionally, having more commands in the same command line as COPY
works better (though since psql splits lines at semicolons, this doesn't
matter much unless you're using -c).
Also tighten a couple of switches on PQresultStatus() to add
PGRES_COPY_BOTH support and stop assuming that unknown statuses received
are errors; have those print diagnostics where warranted.