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2024-12-29contrib/citext: Use SQL-standard function bodies.Tom Lane
In the same spirit as 969bbd0fa, 13e3796c9, 3f323eba8. Tom Lane and Ronan Dunklau Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3316564.aeNJFYEL58@aivenlaptop
2024-07-25Add argument names to the regexp_XXX functions.Tom Lane
This change allows these functions to be called using named-argument notation, which can be helpful for readability, particularly for the ones with many arguments. There was considerable debate about exactly which names to use, but in the end we settled on the names already shown in our documentation table 9.10. The citext extension provides citext-aware versions of some of these functions, so add argument names to those too. In passing, fix table 9.10's syntax synopses for regexp_match, which were slightly wrong about which combinations of arguments are allowed. Jian He, reviewed by Dian Fay and others Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CACJufxG3NFKKsh6x4fRLv8h3V-HvN4W5dA=zNKMxsNcDwOKang@mail.gmail.com
2020-02-13Mark some contrib modules as "trusted".Tom Lane
This allows these modules to be installed into a database without superuser privileges (assuming that the DBA or sysadmin has installed the module's files in the expected place). You only need CREATE privilege on the current database, which by default would be available to the database owner. The following modules are marked trusted: btree_gin btree_gist citext cube dict_int earthdistance fuzzystrmatch hstore hstore_plperl intarray isn jsonb_plperl lo ltree pg_trgm pgcrypto seg tablefunc tcn tsm_system_rows tsm_system_time unaccent uuid-ossp In the future we might mark some more modules trusted, but there seems to be no debate about these, and on the whole it seems wise to be conservative with use of this feature to start out with. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/32315.1580326876@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-11-23Add a 64-bit hash function for type citext.Tom Lane
Amul Sul, reviewed by Hironobu Suzuki Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAJ_b947JjnNr9Cp45iNjSqKf6PA5mCTmKsRwPjows93YwQrmw@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-13Distinguish selectivity of < from <= and > from >=.Tom Lane
Historically, the selectivity functions have simply not distinguished < from <=, or > from >=, arguing that the fraction of the population that satisfies the "=" aspect can be considered to be vanishingly small, if the comparison value isn't any of the most-common-values for the variable. (If it is, the code path that executes the operator against each MCV will take care of things properly.) But that isn't really true unless we're dealing with a continuum of variable values, and in practice we seldom are. If "x = const" would estimate a nonzero number of rows for a given const value, then it follows that we ought to estimate different numbers of rows for "x < const" and "x <= const", even if the const is not one of the MCVs. Handling this more honestly makes a significant difference in edge cases, such as the estimate for a tight range (x BETWEEN y AND z where y and z are close together). Hence, split scalarltsel into scalarltsel/scalarlesel, and similarly split scalargtsel into scalargtsel/scalargesel. Adjust <= and >= operator definitions to reference the new selectivity functions. Improve the core ineq_histogram_selectivity() function to make a correction for equality. (Along the way, I learned quite a bit about exactly why that function gives good answers, which I tried to memorialize in improved comments.) The corresponding join selectivity functions were, and remain, just stubs. But I chose to split them similarly, to avoid confusion and to prevent the need for doing this exercise again if someone ever makes them less stubby. In passing, change ineq_histogram_selectivity's clamp for extreme probability estimates so that it varies depending on the histogram size, instead of being hardwired at 0.0001. With the default histogram size of 100 entries, you still get the old clamp value, but bigger histograms should allow us to put more faith in edge values. Tom Lane, reviewed by Aleksander Alekseev and Kuntal Ghosh Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/12232.1499140410@sss.pgh.pa.us
2016-08-18Support the new regexp_match() function for citext.Tom Lane
Emre Hasegeli Patch: <CAE2gYzzF24ZHWqkMukkHwqa0otbES9Rex22LrjQUNbi=oKziNQ@mail.gmail.com>
2016-07-26Repair damage done by citext--1.1--1.2.sql.Robert Haas
That script is incorrect in that it sets the combine function for max(citext) twice instead of setting the combine function for max(citext) once and the combine functon for min(citext) once. The consequence is that if you install 1.0 or 1.1 and then update to 1.2, you end up with min(citext) not having a combine function, contrary to what was intended. If you install 1.2 directly, you're OK. Fix things up by defining a new 1.3 version. Upgrading from 1.2 to 1.3 won't change anything for people who first installed the 1.2 version, but people upgrading from 1.0 or 1.1 will get the right catalog contents once they reach 1.3. Report and patch by David Rowley, reviewed by Andreas Karlsson.
2016-06-07Update citext extension for parallel query.Robert Haas
All citext functions are PARALLEL SAFE, and a couple of them can benefit from having aggregate combine functions. Andreas Karlsson
2015-05-05Fix incorrect declaration of citext's regexp_matches() functions.Tom Lane
These functions should return SETOF TEXT[], like the core functions they are wrappers for; but they were incorrectly declared as returning just TEXT[]. This mistake had two results: first, if there was no match you got a scalar null result, whereas what you should get is an empty set (zero rows). Second, the 'g' flag was effectively ignored, since you would get only one result array even if there were multiple matches, as reported by Jeff Certain. While ignoring 'g' is a clear bug, the behavior for no matches might well have been thought to be the intended behavior by people who hadn't compared it carefully to the core regexp_matches() functions. So we should tread carefully about introducing this change in the back branches. Still, it clearly is a bug and so providing some fix is desirable. After discussion, the conclusion was to introduce the change in a 1.1 version of the citext extension (as we would need to do anyway); 1.0 still contains the incorrect behavior. 1.1 is the default and only available version in HEAD, but it is optional in the back branches, where 1.0 remains the default version. People wishing to adopt the fix in back branches will need to explicitly do ALTER EXTENSION citext UPDATE TO '1.1'. (I also provided a downgrade script in the back branches, so people could go back to 1.0 if necessary.) This should be called out as an incompatible change in the 9.5 release notes, although we'll also document it in the next set of back-branch release notes. The notes should mention that any views or rules that use citext's regexp_matches() functions will need to be dropped before upgrading to 1.1, and then recreated again afterwards. Back-patch to 9.1. The bug goes all the way back to citext's introduction in 8.4, but pre-9.1 there is no extension mechanism with which to manage the change. Given the lack of previous complaints it seems unnecessary to change this behavior in 9.0, anyway.
2011-02-13Convert contrib modules to use the extension facility.Tom Lane
This isn't fully tested as yet, in particular I'm not sure that the "foo--unpackaged--1.0.sql" scripts are OK. But it's time to get some buildfarm cycles on it. sepgsql is not converted to an extension, mainly because it seems to require a very nonstandard installation process. Dimitri Fontaine and Tom Lane