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2025-05-02Handle self-referencing FKs correctly in partitioned tablesÁlvaro Herrera
For self-referencing foreign keys in partitioned tables, we weren't handling creation of pg_constraint rows during CREATE TABLE PARTITION AS as well as ALTER TABLE ATTACH PARTITION. This is an old bug -- mostly, we broke this in 614a406b4ff1 while trying to fix it (so 12.13, 13.9, 14.6 and 15.0 and up all behave incorrectly). This commit reverts part of that with additional fixes for full correctness, and installs more tests to verify the parts we broke, not just the catalog contents but also the user-visible behavior. Backpatch to all live branches. In branches 13 and 14, commit 46a8c27a7226 changed the behavior during DETACH to drop a FK constraint rather than trying to repair it, because the complete fix of repairing catalog constraints was problematic due to lack of previous fixes. For this reason, the test behavior in those branches is a bit different. However, as best as I can tell, the fix works correctly there. In release notes we have to recommend that all self-referencing foreign keys on partitioned tables be recreated if partitions have been created or attached after the FK was created, keeping in mind that violating rows might already be present on the referencing side. Reported-by: Guillaume Lelarge <guillaume@lelarge.info> Reported-by: Matthew Gabeler-Lee <fastcat@gmail.com> Reported-by: Luca Vallisa <luca.vallisa@gmail.com> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAECtzeWHCA+6tTcm2Oh2+g7fURUJpLZb-=pRXgeWJ-Pi+VU=_w@mail.gmail.com Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18156-a44bc7096f0683e6@postgresql.org Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAT=myvsiF-Attja5DcWoUWh21R12R-sfXECY2-3ynt8kaOqjw@mail.gmail.com
2025-04-20Avoid ERROR at ON COMMIT DELETE ROWS after relhassubclass=f.Noah Misch
Commit 7102070329d8147246d2791321f9915c3b5abf31 fixed a similar bug, but it missed the case of database-wide ANALYZE ("use_own_xacts" mode). Commit a07e03fd8fa7daf4d1356f7cb501ffe784ea6257 changed consequences from silent discard of a pg_class stats (relpages et al.) update to ERROR "tuple to be updated was already modified". Losing a relpages update of an ON COMMIT DELETE ROWS table was negligible, but a COMMIT-time error isn't negligible. Back-patch to v13 (all supported versions). Reported-by: Richard Guo <guofenglinux@gmail.com Reported-by: Robins Tharakan <tharakan@gmail.com> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMbWs4-XwMKMKJ_GT=p3_-_=j9rQSEs1FbDFUnW9zHuKPsPNEQ@mail.gmail.com Backpatch-through: 13
2025-04-04Repair misbehavior with duplicate entries in FK SET column lists.Tom Lane
Since v15 we've had an option to apply a foreign key constraint's ON DELETE SET DEFAULT or SET NULL action to just some of the referencing columns. There was not a check for duplicate entries in the list of columns-to-set, though. That caused a potential memory stomp in CreateConstraintEntry(), which incautiously assumed that the list of columns-to-set couldn't be longer than the number of key columns. Even after fixing that, the case doesn't work because you get an error like "multiple assignments to same column" from the SQL command that is generated to do the update. We could either raise an error for duplicate columns or silently suppress the dups, and after a bit of thought I chose to do the latter. This is motivated by the fact that duplicates in the FK column list are legal, so it's not real clear why duplicates in the columns-to-set list shouldn't be. Of course there's no need to actually set the column more than once. I left in the fix in CreateConstraintEntry() too, just because it didn't seem like such low-level code ought to be making assumptions about what it's handed. Bug: #18879 Reported-by: Yu Liang <luy70@psu.edu> Author: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18879-259fc59d072bd4d7@postgresql.org Backpatch-through: 15
2025-04-02Need to do CommandCounterIncrement after StoreAttrMissingVal.Tom Lane
Without this, an additional change to the same pg_attribute row within the same command will fail. This is possible at least with ALTER TABLE ADD COLUMN on a multiple-inheritance-pathway structure. (Another potential hazard is that immediately-following operations might not see the missingval.) Introduced by 95f650674, which split the former coding that used a single pg_attribute update to change both atthasdef and atthasmissing/attmissingval into two updates, but missed that this should entail two CommandCounterIncrements as well. Like that fix, back-patch through v13. Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin <exclusion@gmail.com> Author: Tender Wang <tndrwang@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/025a3ffa-5eff-4a88-97fb-8f583b015965@gmail.com Backpatch-through: 13
2025-03-27Fix guc_malloc calls for consistency and OOM checksDaniel Gustafsson
check_createrole_self_grant and check_synchronized_standby_slots were allocating memory on a LOG elevel without checking if the allocation succeeded or not, which would have led to a segfault on allocation failure. On top of that, a number of callsites were using the ERROR level, relying on erroring out rather than returning false to allow the GUC machinery handle it gracefully. Other callsites used WARNING instead of LOG. While neither being not wrong, this changes all check_ functions do it consistently with LOG. init_custom_variable gets a promoted elevel to FATAL to keep the guc_malloc error handling in line with the rest of the error handling in that function which already call FATAL. If we encounter an OOM in this callsite there is no graceful handling to be had, better to error out hard. Backpatch the fix to check_createrole_self_grant down to v16 and the fix to check_synchronized_standby_slots down to v17 where they were introduced. Author: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se> Reported-by: Nikita <pm91.arapov@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> Bug: #18845 Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18845-582c6e10247377ec@postgresql.org Backpatch-through: 16
2025-03-03Fix broken handling of domains in atthasmissing logic.Tom Lane
If a domain type has a default, adding a column of that type (without any explicit DEFAULT clause) failed to install the domain's default value in existing rows, instead leaving the new column null. This is unexpected, and it used to work correctly before v11. The cause is confusion in the atthasmissing mechanism about which default value to install: we'd only consider installing an explicitly-specified default, and then we'd decide that no table rewrite is needed. To fix, take the responsibility for filling attmissingval out of StoreAttrDefault, and instead put it into ATExecAddColumn's existing logic that derives the correct value to fill the new column with. Also, centralize the logic that determines the need for default-related table rewriting there, instead of spreading it over four or five places. In the back branches, we'll leave the attmissingval-filling code in StoreAttrDefault even though it's now dead, for fear that some extension may be depending on that functionality to exist there. A separate HEAD-only patch will clean up the now-useless code. Reported-by: jian he <jian.universality@gmail.com> Author: jian he <jian.universality@gmail.com> Author: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CACJufxHFssPvkP1we7WMhPD_1kwgbG52o=kQgL+TnVoX5LOyCQ@mail.gmail.com Backpatch-through: 13
2025-02-21Fix a WARNING for data origin discrepancies.Amit Kapila
Previously, a WARNING was issued at the time of defining a subscription with origin=NONE only when the publisher subscribed to the same table from other publishers, indicating potential data origination from different origins. However, the publisher can subscribe to the partition ancestors or partition children of the table from other publishers, which could also result in mixed-origin data inclusion. So, give a WARNING in those cases as well. Reported-by: Sergey Tatarintsev <s.tatarintsev@postgrespro.ru> Author: Hou Zhijie <houzj.fnst@fujitsu.com> Author: Shlok Kyal <shlok.kyal.oss@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Vignesh C <vignesh21@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> Backpatch-through: 16, where it was introduced Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5eda6a9c-63cf-404d-8a49-8dcb116a29f3@postgrespro.ru
2025-02-13Fix MakeTransitionCaptureState() to return a consistent resultMichael Paquier
When an UPDATE trigger referencing a new table and a DELETE trigger referencing an old table are both present, MakeTransitionCaptureState() returns an inconsistent result for UPDATE commands in its set of flags and tuplestores holding the TransitionCaptureState for transition tables. As proved by the test added here, this issue causes a crash in v14 and earlier versions (down to 11, actually, older versions do not support triggers on partitioned tables) during cross-partition updates on a partitioned table. v15 and newer versions are safe thanks to 7103ebb7aae8. This commit fixes the function so that it returns a consistent state by using portions of the changes made in commit 7103ebb7aae8 for v13 and v14. v15 and newer versions are slightly tweaked to match with the older versions, mainly for consistency across branches. Author: Kyotaro Horiguchi Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20250207.150238.968446820828052276.horikyota.ntt@gmail.com Backpatch-through: 13
2025-01-22Repair incorrect handling of AfterTriggerSharedData.ats_modifiedcols.Tom Lane
This patch fixes two distinct errors that both ultimately trace to commit 71d60e2aa, which added the ats_modifiedcols field. The more severe error is that ats_modifiedcols wasn't accounted for in afterTriggerAddEvent's scanning loop that looks for a pre-existing duplicate AfterTriggerSharedData. Thus, a new event could be incorrectly matched to an AfterTriggerSharedData that has a different value of ats_modifiedcols, resulting in the wrong tg_updatedcols bitmap getting passed to the trigger whenever it finally gets fired. We'd not noticed because (a) few triggers consult tg_updatedcols, and (b) we had no tests exercising a case where such a trigger was called as an AFTER trigger. In the test case added by this commit, contrib/lo's trigger fails to remove a large object when expected because (without this fix) it thinks the LO OID column hasn't changed. The other problem was introduced by commit ce5aaea8c, which copied the modified-columns bitmap into trigger-related storage. It made a copy for every trigger event, whereas what we really want is to make a new copy only when we make a new AfterTriggerSharedData entry. (We could imagine adding extra logic to reduce the number of bitmap copies still more, but it doesn't look worthwhile at the moment.) In a simple test of an UPDATE of 10000000 rows with a single AFTER trigger, this thinko roughly tripled the amount of memory consumed by the pending-triggers data structures, from 160446744 to 480443440 bytes. Fixing the first problem requires introducing a bms_equal() call into afterTriggerAddEvent's scanning loop, which is slightly annoying from a speed perspective. However, getting rid of the excessive bms_copy() calls from the second problem balances that out; overall speed of trigger operations is the same or slightly better, in my tests. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3496294.1737501591@sss.pgh.pa.us Backpatch-through: 13
2025-01-21Fix detach of a partition that has a toplevel FK to a partitioned tableÁlvaro Herrera
In common cases, foreign keys are defined on the toplevel partitioned table; but if instead one is defined on a partition and references a partitioned table, and the referencing partition is detached, we would examine the pg_constraint row on the partition being detached, and fail to realize that the sub-constraints must be left alone. This causes the ALTER TABLE DETACH process to fail with ERROR: could not find ON INSERT check triggers of foreign key constraint NNN This is similar but not quite the same as what was fixed by 53af9491a043. This bug doesn't affect branches earlier than 15, because the detach procedure was different there, so we only backpatch down to 15. Fix by skipping such modifying constraints that are children of other constraints being detached. Author: Amul Sul <sulamul@gmail.com> Diagnosys-by: Sami Imseih <samimseih@gmail.com> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAJ_b97GuPh6wQPbxQS-Zpy16Oh+0aMv-w64QcGrLhCOZZ6p+g@mail.gmail.com
2025-01-09Fix an ALTER GROUP ... DROP USER error message.Nathan Bossart
This error message stated the privileges required to add a member to a group even if the user was trying to drop a member: postgres=> alter group a drop user b; ERROR: permission denied to alter role DETAIL: Only roles with the ADMIN option on role "a" may add members. Since the required privileges for both operations are the same, we can fix this by modifying the message to mention both adding and dropping members: postgres=> alter group a drop user b; ERROR: permission denied to alter role DETAIL: Only roles with the ADMIN option on role "a" may add or drop members. Author: ChangAo Chen Reviewed-by: Tom Lane Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/tencent_FAA0D00E3514AAF0BBB6322542A6094FEF05%40qq.com Backpatch-through: 16
2024-12-28In REASSIGN OWNED of a database, lock the tuple as mandated.Noah Misch
Commit aac2c9b4fde889d13f859c233c2523345e72d32b mandated such locking and attempted to fulfill that mandate, but it missed REASSIGN OWNED. Hence, it remained possible to lose VACUUM's inplace update of datfrozenxid if a REASSIGN OWNED processed that database at the same time. This didn't affect the other inplace-updated catalog, pg_class. For pg_class, REASSIGN OWNED calls ATExecChangeOwner() instead of the generic AlterObjectOwner_internal(), and ATExecChangeOwner() fulfills the locking mandate. Like in GRANT, implement this by following the locking protocol for any catalog subject to the generic AlterObjectOwner_internal(). It would suffice to do this for IsInplaceUpdateOid() catalogs only. Back-patch to v13 (all supported versions). Kirill Reshke. Reported by Alexander Kukushkin. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFh8B=mpKjAy4Cuun-HP-f_vRzh2HSvYFG3rhVfYbfEBUhBAGg@mail.gmail.com
2024-12-10Fix comments of GUC hooks for timezone_abbreviationsMichael Paquier
The GUC assign and check hooks used "assign_timezone_abbreviations", which was incorrect. Issue noticed while browsing this area of the code, introduced in 0a20ff54f5e6. Reviewed-by: Tom Lane Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Z1eV6Y8yk77GZhZI@paquier.xyz Backpatch-through: 16
2024-12-09Fix small memory leaks in GUC checksDaniel Gustafsson
Follow-up commit to a9d58bfe8a3a. Backpatch down to v16 where this was added in order to keep the code consistent for future backpatches. Author: Tofig Aliev <t.aliev@postgrespro.ru> Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se> Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/bba4313fdde9db46db279f96f3b748b1@postgrespro.ru Backpatch-through: 16
2024-12-07Ensure that pg_amop/amproc entries depend on their lefttype/righttype.Tom Lane
Usually an entry in pg_amop or pg_amproc does not need a dependency on its amoplefttype/amoprighttype/amproclefttype/amprocrighttype types, because there is an indirect dependency via the argument types of its referenced operator or procedure, or via the opclass it belongs to. However, for some support procedures in some index AMs, the argument types of the support procedure might not mention the column data type at all. Also, the amop/amproc entry might be treated as "loose" in the opfamily, in which case it lacks a dependency on any particular opclass; or it might be a cross-type entry having a reference to a datatype that is not its opclass' opcintype. The upshot of all this is that there are cases where a datatype can be dropped while leaving behind amop/amproc entries that mention it, because there is no path in pg_depend showing that those entries depend on that type. Such entries are harmless in normal activity, because they won't get used, but they cause problems for maintenance actions such as dropping the operator family. They also cause pg_dump to produce bogus output. The previous commit put a band-aid on the DROP OPERATOR FAMILY failure, but a real fix is needed. To fix, add pg_depend entries showing that a pg_amop/pg_amproc entry depends on its lefttype/righttype. To avoid bloating pg_depend too much, skip this if the referenced operator or function has that type as an input type. (I did not bother with considering the possible indirect dependency via the opclass' opcintype; at least in the reported case, that wouldn't help anyway.) Probably, the reason this has escaped notice for so long is that add-on datatypes and relevant opclasses/opfamilies are usually packaged as extensions nowadays, so that there's no way to drop a type without dropping the referencing opclasses/opfamilies too. Still, in the absence of pg_depend entries there's nothing that constrains DROP EXTENSION to drop the opfamily entries before the datatype, so it seems possible for a DROP failure to occur anyway. The specific case that was reported doesn't fail in v13, because v13 prefers to attach the support procedure to the opclass not the opfamily. But it's surely possible to construct other edge cases that do fail in v13, so patch that too. Per report from Yoran Heling. Back-patch to all supported branches. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Z1MVCOh1hprjK5Sf@gmai021
2024-12-04Fix use-after-free in parallel_vacuum_reset_dead_itemsJohn Naylor
parallel_vacuum_reset_dead_items used a local variable to hold a pointer from the passed vacrel, purely as a shorthand. This pointer was later freed and a new allocation was made and stored to the struct. Then the local pointer was mistakenly referenced again. This apparently happened not to break anything since the freed chunk would have been put on the context's freelist, so it was accidentally the same pointer anyway, in which case the DSA handle was correctly updated. The minimal fix is to change two places so they access dead_items through the vacrel. This coding style is a maintenance hazard, so while at it get rid of most other similar usages, which were inconsistently used anyway. Analysis and patch by Vallimaharajan G, with further defensive coding by me Backpath to v17, when TidStore came in Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1936493cc38.68cb2ef27266.7456585136086197135@zohocorp.com
2024-11-12Fix arrays comparison in CompareOpclassOptions()Alexander Korotkov
The current code calls array_eq() and does not provide FmgrInfo. This commit provides initialization of FmgrInfo and uses C collation as the safe option for text comparison because we don't know anything about the semantics of opclass options. Backpatch to 13, where opclass options were introduced. Reported-by: Nicolas Maus Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18692-72ea398df3ec6712%40postgresql.org Backpatch-through: 13
2024-11-11Fix improper interactions between session_authorization and role.Tom Lane
The SQL spec mandates that SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION implies SET ROLE NONE. We tried to implement that within the lowest-level functions that manipulate these settings, but that was a bad idea. In particular, guc.c assumes that it doesn't matter in what order it applies GUC variable updates, but that was not the case for these two variables. This problem, compounded by some hackish attempts to work around it, led to some security-grade issues: * Rolling back a transaction that had done SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION would revert to SET ROLE NONE, even if that had not been the previous state, so that the effective user ID might now be different from what it had been. * The same for SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION in a function SET clause. * If a parallel worker inspected current_setting('role'), it saw "none" even when it should see something else. Also, although the parallel worker startup code intended to cope with the current role's pg_authid row having disappeared, its implementation of that was incomplete so it would still fail. Fix by fully separating the miscinit.c functions that assign session_authorization from those that assign role. To implement the spec's requirement, teach set_config_option itself to perform "SET ROLE NONE" when it sets session_authorization. (This is undoubtedly ugly, but the alternatives seem worse. In particular, there's no way to do it within assign_session_authorization without incompatible changes in the API for GUC assign hooks.) Also, improve ParallelWorkerMain to directly set all the relevant user-ID variables instead of relying on some of them to get set indirectly. That allows us to survive not finding the pg_authid row during worker startup. In v16 and earlier, this includes back-patching 9987a7bf3 which fixed a violation of GUC coding rules: SetSessionAuthorization is not an appropriate place to be throwing errors from. Security: CVE-2024-10978
2024-11-02Revert "For inplace update, send nontransactional invalidations."Noah Misch
This reverts commit 95c5acb3fc261067ab65ddc0b2dca8e162f09442 (v17) and counterparts in each other non-master branch. If released, that commit would have caused a worst-in-years minor release regression, via undetected LWLock self-deadlock. This commit and its self-deadlock fix warrant more bake time in the master branch. Reported by Alexander Lakhin. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/10ec0bc3-5933-1189-6bb8-5dec4114558e@gmail.com
2024-10-30Fix some more bugs in foreign keys connecting partitioned tablesÁlvaro Herrera
* In DetachPartitionFinalize() we were applying a tuple conversion map to tuples that didn't need one, which can lead to erratic behavior if a partitioned table has a partition with a different column order, as reported by Alexander Lakhin. This was introduced by 53af9491a043. Don't do that. Also, modify a recently added test case to exercise this. * The same function as well as CloneFkReferenced() were acquiring AccessShareLock on a partition, only to have CreateTrigger() later acquire ShareRowExclusiveLock on it. This can lead to deadlock by lock escalation, unnecessarily. Avoid that by acquiring the stronger lock to begin with. This probably dates back to branch 12, but I have never seen a report of this being a problem in the field. * Innocuous but wasteful: also introduced by 53af9491a043, we were reading a pg_constraint tuple from syscache that we don't need, as reported by Tender Wang. Don't. Backpatch to 15. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/461e9c26-2076-8224-e119-84998b6a784e@gmail.com
2024-10-25For inplace update, send nontransactional invalidations.Noah Misch
The inplace update survives ROLLBACK. The inval didn't, so another backend's DDL could then update the row without incorporating the inplace update. In the test this fixes, a mix of CREATE INDEX and ALTER TABLE resulted in a table with an index, yet relhasindex=f. That is a source of index corruption. Back-patch to v12 (all supported versions). The back branch versions don't change WAL, because those branches just added end-of-recovery SIResetAll(). All branches change the ABI of extern function PrepareToInvalidateCacheTuple(). No PGXN extension calls that, and there's no apparent use case in extensions. Reviewed by Nitin Motiani and (in earlier versions) Andres Freund. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20240523000548.58.nmisch@google.com
2024-10-22Restructure foreign key handling code for ATTACH/DETACHÁlvaro Herrera
... to fix bugs when the referenced table is partitioned. The catalog representation we chose for foreign keys connecting partitioned tables (in commit f56f8f8da6af) is inconvenient, in the sense that a standalone table has a different way to represent the constraint when referencing a partitioned table, than when the same table becomes a partition (and vice versa). Because of this, we need to create additional catalog rows on detach (pg_constraint and pg_trigger), and remove them on attach. We were doing some of those things, but not all of them, leading to missing catalog rows in certain cases. The worst problem seems to be that we are missing action triggers after detaching a partition, which means that you could update/delete rows from the referenced partitioned table that still had referencing rows on that table, the server failing to throw the required errors. !!! Note that this means existing databases with FKs that reference partitioned tables might have rows that break relational integrity, on tables that were once partitions on the referencing side of the FK. Another possible problem is that trying to reattach a table that had been detached would fail indicating that internal triggers cannot be found, which from the user's point of view is nonsensical. In branches 15 and above, we fix this by creating a new helper function addFkConstraint() which is in charge of creating a standalone pg_constraint row, and repurposing addFkRecurseReferencing() and addFkRecurseReferenced() so that they're only the recursive routine for each side of the FK, and they call addFkConstraint() to create pg_constraint at each partitioning level and add the necessary triggers. These new routines can be used during partition creation, partition attach and detach, and foreign key creation. This reduces redundant code and simplifies the flow. In branches 14 and 13, we have a much simpler fix that consists on simply removing the constraint on detach. The reason is that those branches are missing commit f4566345cf40, which reworked the way this works in a way that we didn't consider back-patchable at the time. We opted to leave branch 12 alone, because it's different from branch 13 enough that the fix doesn't apply; and because it is going in EOL mode very soon, patching it now might be worse since there's no way to undo the damage if it goes wrong. Existing databases might need to be repaired. In the future we might want to rethink the catalog representation to avoid this problem, but for now the code seems to do what's required to make the constraints operate correctly. Co-authored-by: Jehan-Guillaume de Rorthais <jgdr@dalibo.com> Co-authored-by: Tender Wang <tndrwang@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org> Reported-by: Guillaume Lelarge <guillaume@lelarge.info> Reported-by: Jehan-Guillaume de Rorthais <jgdr@dalibo.com> Reported-by: Thomas Baehler (SBB CFF FFS) <thomas.baehler2@sbb.ch> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20230420144344.40744130@karst Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20230705233028.2f554f73@karst Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/GVAP278MB02787E7134FD691861635A8BC9032@GVAP278MB0278.CHEP278.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18541-628a61bc267cd2d3@postgresql.org
2024-10-21Fix wrong assertion and poor error messages in "COPY (query) TO".Tom Lane
If the query is rewritten into a NOTIFY command by a DO INSTEAD rule, we'd get an assertion failure, or in non-assert builds issue a rather confusing error message. Improve that. Also fix a longstanding grammar mistake in a nearby error message. Per bug #18664 from Alexander Lakhin. Back-patch to all supported branches. Tender Wang and Tom Lane Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18664-ffd0ebc2386598df@postgresql.org
2024-10-17Fix validation of COPY FORCE_NOT_NULL/FORCE_NULL for the all-column casesMichael Paquier
This commit adds missing checks for COPY FORCE_NOT_NULL and FORCE_NULL when applied to all columns via "*". These options now correctly require CSV mode and are disallowed in COPY TO, making their behavior consistent with FORCE_QUOTE. Some regression tests are added to verify the correct behavior for the all-columns case, including FORCE_QUOTE, which was not tested. Backpatch down to 17, where support for the all-column grammar with FORCE_NOT_NULL and FORCE_NULL has been added. Author: Joel Jacobson Reviewed-by: Zhang Mingli Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/65030d1d-5f90-4fa4-92eb-f5f50389858e@app.fastmail.com Backpatch-through: 17
2024-10-05Use generateClonedIndexStmt to propagate CREATE INDEX to partitions.Tom Lane
When instantiating an existing partitioned index for a new child partition, we use generateClonedIndexStmt to build a suitable IndexStmt to pass to DefineIndex. However, when DefineIndex needs to recurse to instantiate a newly created partitioned index on an existing child partition, it was doing copyObject on the given IndexStmt and then applying a bunch of ad-hoc fixups. This has a number of problems, primarily that it implies fresh lookups of referenced objects such as opclasses and collations. Since commit 2af07e2f7 caused DefineIndex to restrict search_path internally, those lookups could fail or deliver different results than the original one. We can avoid those problems and save a few dozen lines of code by using generateClonedIndexStmt in this code path too. Another thing this fixes is incorrect propagation of parent-index comments to child indexes (because the copyObject approach copies the idxcomment field while generateClonedIndexStmt doesn't). I had noticed this in connection with commit c01eb619a, but not run the problem to ground. I'm tempted to back-patch this further than v17, but the only thing it's known to fix in older branches is the comment issue, which is pretty minor and doesn't seem worth the risk of introducing new issues in stable branches. (If anyone does care about that, clearing idxcomment in the copied IndexStmt would be a safer fix.) Per bug #18637 from usamoi. Back-patch to v17 where the search_path change came in. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18637-f51e314546e3ba2a@postgresql.org
2024-09-29Remove NULL dereference from RenameRelationInternal().Noah Misch
Defect in last week's commit aac2c9b4fde889d13f859c233c2523345e72d32b, per Coverity. Reaching this would need catalog corruption. Back-patch to v12, like that commit.
2024-09-24For inplace update durability, make heap_update() callers wait.Noah Misch
The previous commit fixed some ways of losing an inplace update. It remained possible to lose one when a backend working toward a heap_update() copied a tuple into memory just before inplace update of that tuple. In catalogs eligible for inplace update, use LOCKTAG_TUPLE to govern admission to the steps of copying an old tuple, modifying it, and issuing heap_update(). This includes MERGE commands. To avoid changing most of the pg_class DDL, don't require LOCKTAG_TUPLE when holding a relation lock sufficient to exclude inplace updaters. Back-patch to v12 (all supported versions). In v13 and v12, "UPDATE pg_class" or "UPDATE pg_database" can still lose an inplace update. The v14+ UPDATE fix needs commit 86dc90056dfdbd9d1b891718d2e5614e3e432f35, and it wasn't worth reimplementing that fix without such infrastructure. Reviewed by Nitin Motiani and (in earlier versions) Heikki Linnakangas. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20231027214946.79.nmisch@google.com
2024-09-24Fix data loss at inplace update after heap_update().Noah Misch
As previously-added tests demonstrated, heap_inplace_update() could instead update an unrelated tuple of the same catalog. It could lose the update. Losing relhasindex=t was a source of index corruption. Inplace-updating commands like VACUUM will now wait for heap_update() commands like GRANT TABLE and GRANT DATABASE. That isn't ideal, but a long-running GRANT already hurts VACUUM progress more just by keeping an XID running. The VACUUM will behave like a DELETE or UPDATE waiting for the uncommitted change. For implementation details, start at the systable_inplace_update_begin() header comment and README.tuplock. Back-patch to v12 (all supported versions). In back branches, retain a deprecated heap_inplace_update(), for extensions. Reported by Smolkin Grigory. Reviewed by Nitin Motiani, (in earlier versions) Heikki Linnakangas, and (in earlier versions) Alexander Lakhin. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMp+ueZQz3yDk7qg42hk6-9gxniYbp-=bG2mgqecErqR5gGGOA@mail.gmail.com
2024-09-17Repair pg_upgrade for identity sequences with non-default persistence.Tom Lane
Since we introduced unlogged sequences in v15, identity sequences have defaulted to having the same persistence as their owning table. However, it is possible to change that with ALTER SEQUENCE, and pg_dump tries to preserve the logged-ness of sequences when it doesn't match (as indeed it wouldn't for an unlogged table from before v15). The fly in the ointment is that ALTER SEQUENCE SET [UN]LOGGED fails in binary-upgrade mode, because it needs to assign a new relfilenode which we cannot permit in that mode. Thus, trying to pg_upgrade a database containing a mismatching identity sequence failed. To fix, add syntax to ADD/ALTER COLUMN GENERATED AS IDENTITY to allow the sequence's persistence to be set correctly at creation, and use that instead of ALTER SEQUENCE SET [UN]LOGGED in pg_dump. (I tried to make SET [UN]LOGGED work without any pg_dump modifications, but that seems too fragile to be a desirable answer. This way should be markedly faster anyhow.) In passing, document the previously-undocumented SEQUENCE NAME option that pg_dump also relies on for identity sequences; I see no value in trying to pretend it doesn't exist. Per bug #18618 from Anthony Hsu. Back-patch to v15 where we invented this stuff. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18618-d4eb26d669ed110a@postgresql.org
2024-09-09Fix waits of REINDEX CONCURRENTLY for indexes with predicates or expressionsMichael Paquier
As introduced by f9900df5f94, a REINDEX CONCURRENTLY job done for an index with predicates or expressions would set PROC_IN_SAFE_IC in its MyProc->statusFlags, causing it to be ignored by other concurrent operations. Such concurrent index rebuilds should never be ignored, as a predicate or an expression could call a user-defined function that accesses a different table than the table where the index is rebuilt. A test that uses injection points is added, backpatched down to 17. Michail has proposed a different test, but I have added something simpler with more coverage. Oversight in f9900df5f949. Author: Michail Nikolaev Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CANtu0oj9A3kZVduFTG0vrmGnKB+DCHgEpzOp0qAyOgmks84j0w@mail.gmail.com Backpatch-through: 14
2024-08-29Message style improvementsPeter Eisentraut
2024-08-29Disallow USING clause when altering type of generated columnPeter Eisentraut
This does not make sense. It would write the output of the USING clause into the converted column, which would violate the generation expression. This adds a check to error out if this is specified. There was a test for this, but that test errored out for a different reason, so it was not effective. Reported-by: Jian He <jian.universality@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Yugo NAGATA <nagata@sraoss.co.jp> Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/c7083982-69f4-4b14-8315-f9ddb20b9834%40eisentraut.org
2024-08-24Revert support for ALTER TABLE ... MERGE/SPLIT PARTITION(S) commandsAlexander Korotkov
This commit reverts 1adf16b8fb, 87c21bb941, and subsequent fixes and improvements including df64c81ca9, c99ef1811a, 9dfcac8e15, 885742b9f8, 842c9b2705, fcf80c5d5f, 96c7381c4c, f4fc7cb54b, 60ae37a8bc, 259c96fa8f, 449cdcd486, 3ca43dbbb6, 2a679ae94e, 3a82c689fd, fbd4321fd5, d53a4286d7, c086896625, 4e5d6c4091, 04158e7fa3. The reason for reverting is security issues related to repeatable name lookups (CVE-2014-0062). Even though 04158e7fa3 solved part of the problem, there are still remaining issues, which aren't feasible to even carefully analyze before the RC deadline. Reported-by: Noah Misch, Robert Haas Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20240808171351.a9.nmisch%40google.com Backpatch-through: 17
2024-08-22Avoid repeated table name lookups in createPartitionTable()Alexander Korotkov
Currently, createPartitionTable() opens newly created table using its name. This approach is prone to privilege escalation attack, because we might end up opening another table than we just created. This commit address the issue above by opening newly created table by its OID. It appears to be tricky to get a relation OID out of ProcessUtility(). We have to extend TableLikeClause with new newRelationOid field, which is filled within ProcessUtility() to be further accessed by caller. Security: CVE-2014-0062 Reported-by: Noah Misch Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20240808171351.a9.nmisch%40google.com Reviewed-by: Pavel Borisov, Dmitry Koval
2024-08-21Disallow creating binary-coercible casts involving range types.Tom Lane
For a long time we have forbidden binary-coercible casts to or from composite and array types, because such a cast cannot work correctly: the type OID embedded in the value would need to change, but it won't in a binary coercion. That reasoning applies equally to range types, but we overlooked installing a similar restriction here when we invented range types. Do so now. Given the lack of field complaints, we won't change this in stable branches, but it seems not too late for v17. Per discussion of a problem noted by Peter Eisentraut. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/076968e1-0852-40a9-bc0b-117cd3f0e43c@eisentraut.org
2024-08-19Explain dropdb can't use syscache because of TOASTTomas Vondra
Add a comment explaining dropdb() can't rely on syscache. The issue with flattened rows was fixed by commit 0f92b230f88b, but better to have a clear explanation why the systable scan is necessary. The other places doing in-place updates on pg_database have the same comment. Suggestion and patch by Yugo Nagata. Backpatch to 12, same as the fix. Author: Yugo Nagata Backpatch-through: 12 Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJTYsWWNkCt+-UnMhg=BiCD3Mh8c2JdHLofPxsW3m2dkDFw8RA@mail.gmail.com
2024-08-19Fix DROP DATABASE for databases with many ACLsTomas Vondra
Commit c66a7d75e652 modified DROP DATABASE so that if interrupted, the database is known to be in an invalid state and can only be dropped. This is done by setting a flag using an in-place update, so that it's not lost in case of rollback. For databases with many ACLs, this may however fail like this: ERROR: wrong tuple length This happens because with many ACLs, the pg_database.datacl attribute gets TOASTed. The dropdb() code reads the tuple from the syscache, which means it's detoasted. But the in-place update expects the tuple length to match the on-disk tuple. Fixed by reading the tuple from the catalog directly, not from syscache. Report and fix by Ayush Tiwari. Backpatch to 12. The DROP DATABASE fix was backpatched to 11, but 11 is EOL at this point. Reported-by: Ayush Tiwari Author: Ayush Tiwari Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra Backpatch-through: 12 Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJTYsWWNkCt+-UnMhg=BiCD3Mh8c2JdHLofPxsW3m2dkDFw8RA@mail.gmail.com
2024-08-08Refuse ATTACH of a table referenced by a foreign keyAlvaro Herrera
Trying to attach a table as a partition which is already on the referenced side of a foreign key on the partitioned table that it is being attached to, leads to strange behavior: we try to clone the foreign key from the parent to the partition, but this new FK points to the partition itself, and the mix of pg_constraint rows and triggers doesn't behave well. Rather than trying to untangle the mess (which might be possible given sufficient time), I opted to forbid the ATTACH. This doesn't seem a problematic restriction, given that we already fail to create the foreign key if you do it the other way around, that is, having the partition first and the FK second. Backpatch to all supported branches. Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin <exclusion@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Tender Wang <tndrwang@gmail.com> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18541-628a61bc267cd2d3@postgresql.org
2024-08-08Refactor error messages to reduce duplicationAlvaro Herrera
I also took the liberty of changing errmsg("COPY DEFAULT only available using COPY FROM") to errmsg("COPY %s cannot be used with %s", "DEFAULT", "COPY TO") because the original wording is unlike all other messages that indicate option incompatibility. This message was added by commit 9f8377f7a279 (16-era), in whose development thread there was no discussion on this point. Backpatch to 17.
2024-07-31Revert "Allow parallel workers to cope with a newly-created session user ID."Tom Lane
This reverts commit 5887dd4894db5ac1c6411615160555ac6e57e49b. Some buildfarm animals are failing with "cannot change "client_encoding" during a parallel operation". It looks like assign_client_encoding is unhappy at being asked to roll back a client_encoding setting after a parallel worker encounters a failure. There must be more to it though: why didn't I see this during local testing? In any case, it's clear that moving the RestoreGUCState() call is not as side-effect-free as I thought. Given that the bug f5f30c22e intended to fix has gone unreported for years, it's not something that's urgent to fix; I'm not willing to risk messing with it further with only days to our next release wrap.
2024-07-31Allow parallel workers to cope with a newly-created session user ID.Tom Lane
Parallel workers failed after a sequence like BEGIN; CREATE USER foo; SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION foo; because check_session_authorization could not see the uncommitted pg_authid row for "foo". This is because we ran RestoreGUCState() in a separate transaction using an ordinary just-created snapshot. The same disease afflicts any other GUC that requires catalog lookups and isn't forgiving about the lookups failing. To fix, postpone RestoreGUCState() into the worker's main transaction after we've set up a snapshot duplicating the leader's. This affects check_transaction_isolation and check_transaction_deferrable, which think they should only run during transaction start. Make them act like check_transaction_read_only, which already knows it should silently accept the value when InitializingParallelWorker. Per bug #18545 from Andrey Rachitskiy. Back-patch to all supported branches, because this has been wrong for awhile. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18545-feba138862f19aaa@postgresql.org
2024-07-23Use more consistently int64 for page numbers in SLRU-related codeMichael Paquier
clog.c, async.c and predicate.c included some SLRU page numbers still handled as 4-byte integers, while int64 should be used for this purpose. These holes have been introduced in 4ed8f0913bfd, that has introduced the use of 8-byte integers for SLRU page numbers, still forgot about the code paths updated by this commit. Reported-by: Noah Misch Author: Aleksander Alekseev, Michael Paquier Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20240626002747.dc.nmisch@google.com Backpatch-through: 17
2024-07-17Use PqMsg_* macros in more places.Nathan Bossart
Commit f4b54e1ed9, which introduced macros for protocol characters, missed updating a few places. It also did not introduce macros for messages sent from parallel workers to their leader processes. This commit adds a new section in protocol.h for those. Author: Aleksander Alekseev Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJ7c6TNTd09AZq8tGaHS3LDyH_CCnpv0oOz2wN1dGe8zekxrdQ%40mail.gmail.com Backpatch-through: 17
2024-07-16When creating materialized views, use REFRESH to load data.Jeff Davis
Previously, CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW ... WITH DATA populated the MV the same way as CREATE TABLE ... AS. Instead, reuse the REFRESH logic, which locks down security-restricted operations and restricts the search_path. This reduces the chance that a subsequent refresh will fail. Reported-by: Noah Misch Backpatch-through: 17 Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20240630222344.db.nmisch@google.com
2024-07-15Add missing RestrictSearchPath() calls.Jeff Davis
Reported-by: Noah Misch Backpatch-through: 17 Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20240630222344.db.nmisch@google.com
2024-07-15Fix tablespace handling in MERGE/SPLIT partition commands.Fujii Masao
As commit ca4103025d stated, new partitions without a specified tablespace should inherit the parent relation's tablespace. However, previously, ALTER TABLE MERGE PARTITIONS and ALTER TABLE SPLIT PARTITION commands always created new partitions in the default tablespace, ignoring the parent's tablespace. This commit ensures new partitions inherit the parent's tablespace. Backpatch to v17 where these commands were introduced. Author: Fujii Masao Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/abaf390b-3320-40a5-8815-ef476db5cfe7@oss.nttdata.com
2024-07-13Don't lose partitioned table reltuples=0 after relhassubclass=f.Noah Misch
ANALYZE sets relhassubclass=f when a partitioned table no longer has partitions. An ANALYZE doing that proceeded to apply the inplace update of pg_class.reltuples to the old pg_class tuple instead of the new tuple, losing that reltuples=0 change if the ANALYZE committed. Non-partitioning inheritance trees were unaffected. Back-patch to v14, where commit 375aed36ad83f0e021e9bdd3a0034c0c992c66dc introduced maintenance of partitioned table pg_class.reltuples. Reported by Alexander Lakhin. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/a295b499-dcab-6a99-c06e-01cf60593344@gmail.com
2024-07-12Fix ALTER TABLE DETACH for inconsistent indexesAlvaro Herrera
When a partitioned table has an index that doesn't support a constraint, but a partition has an equivalent index that does, then a DETACH operation would misbehave: a crash in assertion-enabled systems (because we fail to find the constraint in the parent that we expect to), or a broken coninhcount value (-1) in production systems (because we blindly believe that we've successfully detached the parent). While we should reject an ATTACH of a partition with such an index, we have failed to do so in existing releases, so adding an error in stable releases might break the (unlikely) existing applications that rely on this behavior. At this point I don't even want to reject them in master, because it'd break pg_upgrade if such databases exist, and there would be no easy way to fix existing databases without expensive index rebuilds. (Later on we could add ALTER TABLE ... ADD CONSTRAINT USING INDEX to partitioned tables, which would allow the user to fix such patterns. At that point we could add more restrictions to prevent the problem from its root.) Also, add a test case that leaves one table in this condition, so that we can verify that pg_upgrade continues to work if we later decide to change the policy on the master branch. Backpatch to all supported branches. Co-authored-by: Tender Wang <tndrwang@gmail.com> Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin <exclusion@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Tender Wang <tndrwang@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18500-62948b6fe5522f56@postgresql.org
2024-07-01Preserve CurrentMemoryContext across notify and sinval interrupts.Tom Lane
ProcessIncomingNotify is called from the main processing loop that normally runs in MessageContext. That outer-loop code assumes that whatever it allocates will be cleaned up when we're done processing the current client message --- but if we service a notify interrupt, then whatever gets allocated before the next switch into MessageContext will be permanently leaked in TopMemoryContext, because CommitTransactionCommand sets CurrentMemoryContext to TopMemoryContext. There are observable leaks associated with (at least) encoding conversion of incoming queries and parameters attached to Bind messages. sinval catchup interrupts have a similar problem. There might be others, but I've not identified any other clear cases. To fix, take care to save and restore CurrentMemoryContext across the Start/CommitTransactionCommand calls in these functions. Per bug #18512 from wizardbrony. Commit to back branches only; in HEAD, this was dealt with by the riskier but more thoroughgoing approach in commit 1afe31f03. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3478884.1718656625@sss.pgh.pa.us
2024-06-27Lock before setting relhassubclass on RELKIND_PARTITIONED_INDEX.Noah Misch
Commit 5b562644fec696977df4a82790064e8287927891 added a comment that SetRelationHasSubclass() callers must hold this lock. When commit 17f206fbc824d2b4b14480199ca9ff7dea417eda extended use of this column to partitioned indexes, it didn't take the lock. As the latter commit message mentioned, we currently never reset a partitioned index to relhassubclass=f. That largely avoids harm from the lock omission. The cause for fixing this now is to unblock introducing a rule about locks required to heap_update() a pg_class row. This might cause more deadlocks. It gives minor user-visible benefits: - If an ALTER INDEX SET TABLESPACE runs concurrently with ALTER TABLE ATTACH PARTITION or CREATE PARTITION OF, one transaction blocks instead of failing with "tuple concurrently updated". (Many cases of DDL concurrency still fail that way.) - Match ALTER INDEX ATTACH PARTITION in choosing to lock the index. While not user-visible today, we'll need this if we ever make something set the flag to false for a partitioned index, like ANALYZE does today for tables. Back-patch to v12 (all supported versions), the plan for the commit relying on the new rule. In back branches, add LockOrStrongerHeldByMe() instead of adding a LockHeldByMe() parameter. Reviewed (in an earlier version) by Robert Haas. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20240611024525.9f.nmisch@google.com