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2019-02-12Clean up planner confusion between ncolumns and nkeycolumns.Tom Lane
We're only going to consider key columns when creating indexquals, so there is no point in having the outer loops in indxpath.c iterate further than nkeycolumns. Doing so in match_pathkeys_to_index() is actually wrong, and would have caused crashes by now, except that we have no index AMs supporting both amcanorderbyop and amcaninclude. It's also wrong in relation_has_unique_index_for(). The effect there is to fail to prove uniqueness even when the index does prove it, if there are extra columns. Also future-proof examine_variable() for the day when extra columns can be expressions, and fix what's either a thinko or just an oversight in btcostestimate(): we should consider the number of key columns, not the total, when deciding whether to derate correlation. None of these things seemed important enough to risk changing in a just-before-wrap patch, but since we're past the release wrap window, time to fix 'em. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25526.1549847928@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-02-08Defend against null error message reported by libxml2.Tom Lane
While this isn't really supposed to happen, it can occur in OOM situations and perhaps others. Instead of crashing, substitute "(no message provided)". I didn't worry about localizing this text, since we aren't localizing anything else here; besides, if we're on the edge of OOM, it's unlikely gettext() would work. Report and fix by Sergio Conde Gómez in bug #15624. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15624-4dea54091a2864e6@postgresql.org
2019-01-18Refactor duplicate code into DeconstructFkConstraintRowAlvaro Herrera
My commit 3de241dba86f introduced some code (in tablecmds.c) to obtain data from a pg_constraint row for a foreign key, that already existed in ri_triggers.c. Split it out into its own routine in pg_constraint.c, where it naturally belongs. No functional code changes, only code movement. Backpatch to pg11, because a future bugfix is simpler after this.
2018-11-24Fix float-to-integer coercions to handle edge cases correctly.Tom Lane
ftoi4 and its sibling coercion functions did their overflow checks in a way that looked superficially plausible, but actually depended on an assumption that the MIN and MAX comparison constants can be represented exactly in the float4 or float8 domain. That fails in ftoi4, ftoi8, and dtoi8, resulting in a possibility that values near the MAX limit will be wrongly converted (to negative values) when they need to be rejected. Also, because we compared before rounding off the fractional part, the other three functions threw errors for values that really ought to get rounded to the min or max integer value. Fix by doing rint() first (requiring an assumption that it handles NaN and Inf correctly; but dtoi8 and ftoi8 were assuming that already), and by comparing to values that should coerce to float exactly, namely INTxx_MIN and -INTxx_MIN. Also remove some random cosmetic discrepancies between these six functions. This back-patches commits cbdb8b4c0 and 452b637d4. In the 9.4 branch, also back-patch the portion of 62e2a8dc2 that added PG_INTnn_MIN and related constants to c.h, so that these functions can rely on them. Per bug #15519 from Victor Petrovykh. Patch by me; thanks to Andrew Gierth for analysis and discussion. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15519-4fc785b483201ff1@postgresql.org
2018-11-22Fix another crash in json{b}_populate_recordset and json{b}_to_recordset.Tom Lane
populate_recordset_worker() failed to consider the possibility that the supplied JSON data contains no rows, so that update_cached_tupdesc never got called. This led to a null-pointer dereference since commit 9a5e8ed28; before that it led to a bogus "set-valued function called in context that cannot accept a set" error. Fix by forcing the update to happen. Per bug #15514. Back-patch to v11 as 9a5e8ed28 was. (If we were excited about the bogus error, we could perhaps go back further, but it'd take more work to figure out how to fix it in older branches. Given the lack of field complaints about that aspect, I'm not excited.) Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15514-59d5b4c4065b178b@postgresql.org
2018-10-19Add missing quote_identifier calls for CREATE TRIGGER ... REFERENCING.Tom Lane
Mixed-case names for transition tables weren't dumped correctly. Oversight in commit 8c48375e5, per bug #15440 from Karl Czajkowski. In passing, I couldn't resist a bit of code beautification. Back-patch to v10 where this was introduced. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15440-02d1468e94d63d76@postgresql.org
2018-10-16Avoid statically allocating gmtsub()'s timezone workspace.Tom Lane
localtime.c's "struct state" is a rather large object, ~23KB. We were statically allocating one for gmtsub() to use to represent the GMT timezone, even though that function is not at all heavily used and is never reached in most backends. Let's malloc it on-demand, instead. This does pose the question of how to handle a malloc failure, but there's already a well-defined error report convention here, ie set errno and return NULL. We have but one caller of pg_gmtime in HEAD, and two in back branches, neither of which were troubling to check for error. Make them do so. The possible errors are sufficiently unlikely (out-of-range timestamp, and now malloc failure) that I think elog() is adequate. Back-patch to all supported branches to keep our copies of the IANA timezone code in sync. This particular change is in a stanza that already differs from upstream, so it's a wash for maintenance purposes --- but only as long as we keep the branches the same. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181015200754.7y7zfuzsoux2c4ya@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-10-03MAXALIGN the target address where we store flattened value.Amit Kapila
The API (EOH_flatten_into) that flattens the expanded value representation expects the target address to be maxaligned. All it's usage adhere to that principle except when serializing datums for parallel query. Fix that usage. Diagnosed-by: Tom Lane Author: Tom Lane and Amit Kapila Backpatch-through: 9.6 Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/11629.1536550032@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-02Fix corner-case failures in has_foo_privilege() family of functions.Tom Lane
The variants of these functions that take numeric inputs (OIDs or column numbers) are supposed to return NULL rather than failing on bad input; this rule reduces problems with snapshot skew when queries apply the functions to all rows of a catalog. has_column_privilege() had careless handling of the case where the table OID didn't exist. You might get something like this: select has_column_privilege(9999,'nosuchcol','select'); ERROR: column "nosuchcol" of relation "(null)" does not exist or you might get a crash, depending on the platform's printf's response to a null string pointer. In addition, while applying the column-number variant to a dropped column returned NULL as desired, applying the column-name variant did not: select has_column_privilege('mytable','........pg.dropped.2........','select'); ERROR: column "........pg.dropped.2........" of relation "mytable" does not exist It seems better to make this case return NULL as well. Also, the OID-accepting variants of has_foreign_data_wrapper_privilege, has_server_privilege, and has_tablespace_privilege didn't follow the principle of returning NULL for nonexistent OIDs. Superusers got TRUE, everybody else got an error. Per investigation of Jaime Casanova's report of a new crash in HEAD. These behaviors have been like this for a long time, so back-patch to all supported branches. Patch by me; thanks to Stephen Frost for discussion and review Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJGNTeP=-6Gyqq5TN9OvYEydi7Fv1oGyYj650LGTnW44oAzYCg@mail.gmail.com
2018-09-24Fix over-allocation of space for array_out()'s result string.Tom Lane
array_out overestimated the space needed for its output, possibly by a very substantial amount if the array is multi-dimensional, because of wrong order of operations in the loop that counts the number of curly-brace pairs needed. While the output string is normally short-lived, this could still cause problems in extreme cases. An additional minor error was that it counted one more delimiter than is actually needed. Repair those errors, add an Assert that the space is now correctly calculated, and make some minor improvements in the comments. I also failed to resist the temptation to get rid of an integer modulus operation per array element; a simple comparison is sufficient. This bug dates clear back to Berkeley days, so back-patch to all supported versions. Keiichi Hirobe, minor additional work by me Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH=EFxE9W0tRvQkixR2XJRRCToUYUEDkJZk6tnADXugPBRdcdg@mail.gmail.com
2018-09-17Fix parsetree representation of XMLTABLE(XMLNAMESPACES(DEFAULT ...)).Tom Lane
The original coding for XMLTABLE thought it could represent a default namespace by a T_String Value node with a null string pointer. That's not okay, though; in particular outfuncs.c/readfuncs.c are not on board with such a representation, meaning you'll get a null pointer crash if you try to store a view or rule containing this construct. To fix, change the parsetree representation so that we have a NULL list element, instead of a bogus Value node. This isn't really a functional limitation since default XML namespaces aren't yet implemented in the executor; you'd just get "DEFAULT namespace is not supported" anyway. But crashes are not nice, so back-patch to v10 where this syntax was added. Ordinarily we'd consider a parsetree representation change to be un-backpatchable; but since existing releases would crash on the way to storing such constructs, there can't be any existing views/rules to be incompatible with. Per report from Andrey Lepikhov. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3690074f-abd2-56a9-144a-aa5545d7a291@postgrespro.ru
2018-09-12Repair bug in regexp split performance improvements.Andrew Gierth
Commit c8ea87e4b introduced a temporary conversion buffer for substrings extracted during regexp splits. Unfortunately the code that sized it was failing to ignore the effects of ignored degenerate regexp matches, so for regexp_split_* calls it could under-size the buffer in such cases. Fix, and add some regression test cases (though those will only catch the bug if run in a multibyte encoding). Backpatch to 9.3 as the faulty code was. Thanks to the PostGIS project, Regina Obe and Paul Ramsey for the report (via IRC) and assistance in analysis. Patch by me.
2018-09-11Remove ruleutils.c's special case for BIT [VARYING] literals.Tom Lane
Up to now, get_const_expr() insisted on prefixing BIT and VARBIT literals with 'B'. That's not really necessary, because we always append explicit-cast syntax to identify the constant's type. Moreover, it's subtly wrong for VARBIT, because the parser will interpret B'...' as '...'::"bit"; see make_const() which explicitly assigns type BITOID for a T_BitString literal. So what had been a simple VARBIT literal is reconstructed as ('...'::"bit")::varbit, which is not the same thing, at least not before constant folding. This results in odd differences after dump/restore, as complained of by the patch submitter, and it could result in actual failures in partitioning or inheritance DDL operations (see commit 542320c2b, which repaired similar misbehaviors for some other data types). Fixing it is pretty easy: just remove the special case and let the default code path handle these types. We could have kept the special case for BIT only, but there seems little point in that. Like the previous patch, I judge that back-patching this into stable branches wouldn't be a good idea. However, it seems not quite too late for v11, so let's fix it there. Paul Guo, reviewed by Davy Machado and John Naylor, minor adjustments by me Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CABQrizdTra=2JEqA6+Ms1D1k1Kqw+aiBBhC9TreuZRX2JzxLAA@mail.gmail.com
2018-09-03Remove pg_constraint.conincludingAlvaro Herrera
This column was added in commit 8224de4f42cc ("Indexes with INCLUDE columns and their support in B-tree") to ease writing the ruleutils.c supporting code for that feature, but it turns out to be unnecessary -- we can do the same thing with just one more syscache lookup. Even the documentation for the new column being removed in this commit is awkward. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180902165018.33otxftp3olgtu4t@alvherre.pgsql
2018-08-28Avoid quadratic slowdown in regexp match/split functions.Andrew Gierth
regexp_matches, regexp_split_to_table and regexp_split_to_array all work by compiling a list of match positions as character offsets (NOT byte positions) in the source string. Formerly, they then used text_substr to extract the matched text; but in a multi-byte encoding, that counts the characters in the string, and the characters needed to reach the starting byte position, on every call. Accordingly, the performance degraded as the product of the input string length and the number of match positions, such that splitting a string of a few hundred kbytes could take many minutes. Repair by keeping the wide-character copy of the input string available (only in the case where encoding_max_length is not 1) after performing the match operation, and extracting substrings from that instead. This reduces the complexity to being linear in the number of result bytes, discounting the actual regexp match itself (which is not affected by this patch). In passing, remove cleanup using retail pfree() which was obsoleted by commit ff428cded (Feb 2008) which made cleanup of SRF multi-call contexts automatic. Also increase (to ~134 million) the maximum number of matches and provide an error message when it is reached. Backpatch all the way because this has been wrong forever. Analysis and patch by me; review by Kaiting Chen. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/87pnyn55qh.fsf@news-spur.riddles.org.uk see also https://postgr.es/m/87lg996g4r.fsf@news-spur.riddles.org.uk
2018-08-27Fix typos.Thomas Munro
Author: David Rowley Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f8du35u5DprpykWvgNEScxapbWYJdHq%2Bz06Wj3Y2KFPbw%40mail.gmail.com
2018-07-31Further fixes for quoted-list GUC values in pg_dump and ruleutils.c.Tom Lane
Commits 742869946 et al turn out to be a couple bricks shy of a load. We were dumping the stored values of GUC_LIST_QUOTE variables as they appear in proconfig or setconfig catalog columns. However, although that quoting rule looks a lot like SQL-identifier double quotes, there are two critical differences: empty strings ("") are legal, and depending on which variable you're considering, values longer than NAMEDATALEN might be valid too. So the current technique fails altogether on empty-string list entries (as reported by Steven Winfield in bug #15248) and it also risks truncating file pathnames during dump/reload of GUC values that are lists of pathnames. To fix, split the stored value without any downcasing or truncation, and then emit each element as a SQL string literal. This is a tad annoying, because we now have three copies of the comma-separated-string splitting logic in varlena.c as well as a fourth one in dumputils.c. (Not to mention the randomly-different-from-those splitting logic in libpq...) I looked at unifying these, but it would be rather a mess unless we're willing to tweak the API definitions of SplitIdentifierString, SplitDirectoriesString, or both. That might be worth doing in future; but it seems pretty unsafe for a back-patched bug fix, so for now accept the duplication. Back-patch to all supported branches, as the previous fix was. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7585.1529435872@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-07-28Document security implications of qualified names.Noah Misch
Commit 5770172cb0c9df9e6ce27c507b449557e5b45124 documented secure schema usage, and that advice suffices for using unqualified names securely. Document, in typeconv-func primarily, the additional issues that arise with qualified names. Back-patch to 9.3 (all supported versions). Reviewed by Jonathan S. Katz. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180721012446.GA1840594@rfd.leadboat.com
2018-07-19Fix pg_get_indexdef()'s behavior for included index columns.Tom Lane
The multi-argument form of pg_get_indexdef() failed to print anything when asked to print a single index column that is an included column rather than a key column. This seems an unintentional result of someone having tried to take a short-cut and use the attrsOnly flag for two different purposes. To fix, split said flag into two flags, attrsOnly which suppresses non-attribute info, and keysOnly which suppresses included columns. Add a test case using psql's \d command, which relies on that function. (It's mighty tempting at this point to replace pg_get_indexdef_worker's mess of boolean flag arguments with a single bitmask-of-flags argument, which would allow making the call sites much more self-documenting. But I refrained for the moment.) Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/21724.1531943735@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-07-16doc: Update redirecting linksPeter Eisentraut
Update links that resulted in redirects. Most are changes from http to https, but there are also some other minor edits. (There are still some redirects where the target URL looks less elegant than the one we currently have. I have left those as is.)
2018-07-13Fix crash in json{b}_populate_recordset() and json{b}_to_recordset().Tom Lane
As of commit 37a795a60, populate_recordset_worker() tried to pass back (as rsi.setDesc) a tupdesc that it also had cached in its fn_extra. But the core executor would free the passed-back tupdesc, risking a crash if the function were called again in the same query. The safest and least invasive way to fix that is to make an extra tupdesc copy to pass back. While at it, I failed to resist the temptation to get rid of unnecessary get_fn_expr_argtype() calls here and in populate_record_worker(). Per report from Dmitry Dolgov; thanks to Michael Paquier and Andrew Gierth for investigation and discussion. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+q6zcWzN9ztCfR47ZwgTr1KLnuO6BAY6FurxXhovP4hxr+yOQ@mail.gmail.com
2018-07-04Use context with correct lifetime in hypothetical_dense_rank_final.Andres Freund
The query lifetime expression context created in hypothetical_dense_rank_final() was buggily allocated in the calling memory context. I (Andres) broke that in bf6c614a2f2. Reported-By: Rajkumar Raghuwanshi Author: Amit Langote Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKcux6kmzWmur5HhA_aU6gYVFu0RLQdgJJ+aC9SLdcOvBSrpfA@mail.gmail.com Backpatch: 11-
2018-06-30pgindent run prior to branchingAndrew Dunstan
2018-06-22Allow for pg_upgrade of attributes with missing valuesAndrew Dunstan
Commit 16828d5c02 neglected to do this, so upgraded databases would silently get null instead of the specified default in rows without the attribute defined. A new binary upgrade function is provided to perform this and pg_dump is adjusted to output a call to the function if required in binary upgrade mode. Also included is code to drop missing attribute values for dropped columns. That way if the type is later dropped the missing value won't have a dangling reference to the type. Finally the regression tests are adjusted to ensure that there is a row with a missing value so that this code is exercised in upgrade testing. Catalog version unfortunately bumped. Regression test changes from Tom Lane. Remainder from me, reviewed by Tom Lane, Andres Freund, Alvaro Herrera Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/19987.1529420110@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-06-21Fix partial aggregation for variance(int4) and related aggregates.Tom Lane
A typo in numeric_poly_combine caused bogus results for queries using it, but of course would only manifest if parallel aggregation is performed. Reported by Rajkumar Raghuwanshi. David Rowley did the diagnosis and the fix; I editorialized rather heavily on his regression test additions. Back-patch to v10 where the breakage was introduced (by 9cca11c91). Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKcux6nU4E2x8nkSBpLOT2DPvQ5LviJ3SGyAN6Sz7qDH4G4+Pw@mail.gmail.com
2018-06-21Set correct context for XPath evaluationAlvaro Herrera
According to the SQL standard, the context of XMLTABLE's XPath row_expression is the document node of the XML input document, not the root node. This becomes visible when a relative path rather than absolute is used as row expression. Absolute paths is what was used in original tests and docs (and the most common form used in examples throughout the interwebs), which explains why this wasn't noticed before. Other functions such as xpath() and xpath_exists() also have this problem. While not specified by the SQL standard, it would be pretty odd to leave those functions to behave differently than XMLTABLE, so change them too. However, this is a backwards-incompatible change. No backpatch, out of fear of breaking code depending on the original broken behavior. Author: Markus Winand Reported-By: Markus Winand Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0684A598-002C-42A2-AE12-F024A324EAE4@winand.at
2018-06-20Accept TEXT and CDATA nodes in XMLTABLE's column_expression.Alvaro Herrera
Column expressions that match TEXT or CDATA nodes must return the contents of the nodes themselves, not the content of non-existing children (i.e. the empty string). Author: Markus Winand Reported-by: Markus Winand Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0684A598-002C-42A2-AE12-F024A324EAE4@winand.at
2018-06-17Suppress -Wshift-negative-value warnings.Tom Lane
Clean up four places that result in compiler warnings when using recent gcc with this warning class enabled (as seen on buildfarm members calliphoridae, skink, and others). In all these places, this is purely cosmetic, because the shift distance could not be large enough to risk a change of sign, so there's no chance of implementation-dependent behavior. Still, it's easy enough to avoid the warning by casting the shifted value to unsigned, so let's do that. Patch HEAD only, this isn't worth a back-patch.
2018-06-11Make new error code name match SQL standard more closelyPeter Eisentraut
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/dff3d555-bea4-ac24-29b2-29521b9d08e8%402ndquadrant.com
2018-06-07Add missing serial commasPeter Eisentraut
2018-05-28Initialize new jsonb iterator to zeroPeter Eisentraut
Use palloc0() instead of palloc() to create a new JsonbIterator. Otherwise, the isScalar field is sometimes not initialized. There is probably no impact in practice, but it's cleaner this way and it avoids future problems.
2018-05-17Make numeric power() handle NaNs according to the modern POSIX spec.Tom Lane
In commit 6bdf1303b, we ensured that power()/^ for float8 would honor the NaN behaviors specified by POSIX standards released in this century, ie NaN ^ 0 = 1 and 1 ^ NaN = 1. However, numeric_power() was not touched and continued to follow the once-common behavior that every case involving NaN input produces NaN. For consistency, let's switch the numeric behavior to the modern spec in the same release that ensures that behavior for float8. (Note that while 6bdf1303b was initially back-patched, we later undid that, concluding that any behavioral change should appear only in v11.) Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/10898.1526421338@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-05-16Detoast plpgsql variables if they might live across a transaction boundary.Tom Lane
Up to now, it's been safe for plpgsql to store TOAST pointers in its variables because the ActiveSnapshot for whatever query called the plpgsql function will surely protect such TOAST values from being vacuumed away, even if the owning table rows are committed dead. With the introduction of procedures, that assumption is no longer good in "non atomic" executions of plpgsql code. We adopt the slightly brute-force solution of detoasting all TOAST pointers at the time they are stored into variables, if we're in a non-atomic context, just in case the owning row goes away. Some care is needed to avoid long-term memory leaks, since plpgsql tends to run with CurrentMemoryContext pointing to its call-lifespan context, but we shouldn't assume that no memory is leaked by heap_tuple_fetch_attr. In plpgsql proper, we can do the detoasting work in the "eval_mcontext". Most of the code thrashing here is due to the need to add this capability to expandedrecord.c as well as plpgsql proper. In expandedrecord.c, we can't assume that the caller's context is short-lived, so make use of the short-term sub-context that was already invented for checking domain constraints. In view of this repurposing, it seems good to rename that variable and associated code from "domain_check_cxt" to "short_term_cxt". Peter Eisentraut and Tom Lane Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5AC06865.9050005@anastigmatix.net
2018-05-14Fix file paths in commentsMagnus Hagander
Author: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
2018-05-09Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2018e.Tom Lane
DST law changes in North Korea. Redefinition of "daylight savings" in Ireland, as well as for some past years in Namibia and Czechoslovakia. Additional historical corrections for Czechoslovakia. With this change, the IANA database models Irish timekeeping as following "standard time" in summer, and "daylight savings" in winter, so that the daylight savings offset is one hour behind standard time not one hour ahead. This does not change their UTC offset (+1:00 in summer, 0:00 in winter) nor their timezone abbreviations (IST in summer, GMT in winter), though now "IST" is more correctly read as "Irish Standard Time" not "Irish Summer Time". However, the "is_dst" column in the pg_timezone_names view will now be true in winter and false in summer for the Europe/Dublin zone. Similar changes were made for Namibia between 1994 and 2017, and for Czechoslovakia between 1946 and 1947. So far as I can find, no Postgres internal logic cares about which way tm_isdst is reported; in particular, since commit b2cbced9e we do not rely on it to decide how to interpret ambiguous timestamps during DST transitions. So I don't think this change will affect any Postgres behavior other than the timezone-view outputs. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/30996.1525445902@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-05-09Improve jsonb cast error messageTeodor Sigaev
Initial variant of error message didn't follow style of another casting error messages and wasn't informative. Per gripe from Robert Haas. Reviewer: Tom Lane Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CA%2BTgmob08StTV9yu04D0idRFNMh%2BUoyKax5Otvrix7rEZC8rMw%40mail.gmail.com#CA+Tgmob08StTV9yu04D0idRFNMh+UoyKax5Otvrix7rEZC8rMw@mail.gmail.com
2018-05-08Refine error messagesPeter Eisentraut
"JSON" when not referring to a data type should be upper case.
2018-05-05Put in_range_float4_float8's work in-line.Tom Lane
In commit 8b29e88cd, I'd dithered about whether to make in_range_float4_float8 be a standalone copy of the float in-range logic or have it punt to in_range_float8_float8. I went with the latter, which saves code space though at the cost of performance and readability. However, it emerges that this tickles a compiler or hardware bug on buildfarm member opossum. Test results from commit 55e0e4581 show conclusively that widening a float4 NaN to float8 produces Inf, not NaN, on that machine; which accounts perfectly for the window RANGE test failures it's been showing. We can dodge this problem by making in_range_float4_float8 be an independent function, so that it checks for NaN inputs before widening them. Ordinarily I'd not be very excited about working around such obviously broken functionality; but given that this was a judgment call to begin with, I don't mind reversing it.
2018-05-02Fix assorted compiler warnings seen in the buildfarm.Tom Lane
Failure to use DatumGetFoo/FooGetDatum macros correctly, or at all, causes some warnings about sign conversion. This is just cosmetic at the moment but in principle it's a type violation, so clean up the instances I could find. autoprewarm.c and sharedfileset.c contained code that unportably assumed that pid_t is the same size as int. We've variously dealt with this by casting pid_t to int or to unsigned long for printing purposes; I went with the latter. Fix uninitialized-variable warning in RestoreGUCState. This is a live bug in some sense, but of no great significance given that nobody is very likely to care what "line number" is associated with a GUC that hasn't got a source file recorded.
2018-05-01Clean up warnings from -Wimplicit-fallthrough.Tom Lane
Recent gcc can warn about switch-case fall throughs that are not explicitly labeled as intentional. This seems like a good thing, so clean up the warnings exposed thereby by labeling all such cases with comments that gcc will recognize. In files that already had one or more suitable comments, I generally matched the existing style of those. Otherwise I went with /* FALLTHROUGH */, which is one of the spellings approved at the more-restrictive-than-default level -Wimplicit-fallthrough=4. (At the default level you can also spell it /* FALL ?THRU */, and it's not picky about case. What you can't do is include additional text in the same comment, so some existing comments containing versions of this aren't good enough.) Testing with gcc 8.0.1 (Fedora 28's current version), I found that I also had to put explicit "break"s after elog(ERROR) or ereport(ERROR); apparently, for this purpose gcc doesn't recognize that those don't return. That seems like possibly a gcc bug, but it's fine because in most places we did that anyway; so this amounts to a visit from the style police. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15083.1525207729@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-04-29Avoid wrong results for power() with NaN input on more platforms.Tom Lane
Buildfarm results show that the modern POSIX rule that 1 ^ NaN = 1 is not honored on *BSD until relatively recently, and really old platforms don't believe that NaN ^ 0 = 1 either. (This is unsurprising, perhaps, since SUSv2 doesn't require either behavior.) In hopes of getting to platform independent behavior, let's deal with all the NaN-input cases explicitly in dpow(). Note that numeric_power() doesn't know either of these special cases. But since that behavior is platform-independent, I think it should be addressed separately, and probably not back-patched. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/75DB81BEEA95B445AE6D576A0A5C9E936A73E741@BPXM05GP.gisp.nec.co.jp
2018-04-29Avoid wrong results for power() with NaN input on some platforms.Tom Lane
Per spec, the result of power() should be NaN if either input is NaN. It appears that on some versions of Windows, the libc function does return NaN, but it also sets errno = EDOM, confusing our code that attempts to work around shortcomings of other platforms. Hence, add guard tests to avoid substituting a wrong result for the right one. It's been like this for a long time (and the odd behavior only appears in older MSVC releases, too) so back-patch to all supported branches. Dang Minh Huong, reviewed by David Rowley Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/75DB81BEEA95B445AE6D576A0A5C9E936A73E741@BPXM05GP.gisp.nec.co.jp
2018-04-26Post-feature-freeze pgindent run.Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15719.1523984266@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-04-15Clean up callers of JsonbIteratorNext().Tom Lane
Coverity complained about the lack of a check on the return value in parse_jsonb_index_flags' last call of JsonbIteratorNext. Seems like a reasonable gripe to me, especially since the code is depending on that being WJB_DONE to not leak memory, so add a check. In passing, improve a couple other places where the result was being ignored, either by adding an assert or at least a cast to void. Also, don't spell "WJB_DONE" as "0". That's horrid coding style, and it wasn't consistent either.
2018-04-14Reorganize partitioning codeAlvaro Herrera
There's been a massive addition of partitioning code in PostgreSQL 11, with little oversight on its placement, resulting in a catalog/partition.c with poorly defined boundaries and responsibilities. This commit tries to set a couple of distinct modules to separate things a little bit. There are no code changes here, only code movement. There are three new files: src/backend/utils/cache/partcache.c src/include/partitioning/partdefs.h src/include/utils/partcache.h The previous arrangement of #including catalog/partition.h almost everywhere is no more. Authors: Amit Langote and Álvaro Herrera Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/98e8d509-790a-128c-be7f-e48a5b2d8d97@lab.ntt.co.jp https://postgr.es/m/11aa0c50-316b-18bb-722d-c23814f39059@lab.ntt.co.jp https://postgr.es/m/143ed9a4-6038-76d4-9a55-502035815e68@lab.ntt.co.jp https://postgr.es/m/20180413193503.nynq7bnmgh6vs5vm@alvherre.pgsql
2018-04-12Cleanup covering infrastructureTeodor Sigaev
- Explicitly forbids opclass, collation and indoptions (like DESC/ASC etc) for including columns. Throw an error if user points that. - Truncated storage arrays for such attributes to store only key atrributes, added assertion checks. - Do not check opfamily and collation for including columns in CompareIndexInfo() Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/5ee72852-3c4e-ee35-e2ed-c1d053d45c08@sigaev.ru
2018-04-08Support index INCLUDE in the AM properties interface.Andrew Gierth
This rectifies an oversight in commit 8224de4f4, by adding a new property 'can_include' for pg_indexam_has_property, and adjusting the results of pg_index_column_has_property to give more appropriate results for INCLUDEd columns.
2018-04-07Indexes with INCLUDE columns and their support in B-treeTeodor Sigaev
This patch introduces INCLUDE clause to index definition. This clause specifies a list of columns which will be included as a non-key part in the index. The INCLUDE columns exist solely to allow more queries to benefit from index-only scans. Also, such columns don't need to have appropriate operator classes. Expressions are not supported as INCLUDE columns since they cannot be used in index-only scans. Index access methods supporting INCLUDE are indicated by amcaninclude flag in IndexAmRoutine. For now, only B-tree indexes support INCLUDE clause. In B-tree indexes INCLUDE columns are truncated from pivot index tuples (tuples located in non-leaf pages and high keys). Therefore, B-tree indexes now might have variable number of attributes. This patch also provides generic facility to support that: pivot tuples contain number of their attributes in t_tid.ip_posid. Free 13th bit of t_info is used for indicating that. This facility will simplify further support of index suffix truncation. The changes of above are backward-compatible, pg_upgrade doesn't need special handling of B-tree indexes for that. Bump catalog version Author: Anastasia Lubennikova with contribition by Alexander Korotkov and me Reviewed by: Peter Geoghegan, Tomas Vondra, Antonin Houska, Jeff Janes, David Rowley, Alexander Korotkov Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/56168952.4010101@postgrespro.ru
2018-04-07Add json(b)_to_tsvector functionTeodor Sigaev
Jsonb has a complex nature so there isn't best-for-everything way to convert it to tsvector for full text search. Current to_tsvector(json(b)) suggests to convert only string values, but it's possible to index keys, numerics and even booleans value. To solve that json(b)_to_tsvector has a second required argument contained a list of desired types of json fields. Second argument is a jsonb scalar or array right now with possibility to add new options in a future. Bump catalog version Author: Dmitry Dolgov with some editorization by me Reviewed by: Teodor Sigaev Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CA+q6zcXJQbS1b4kJ_HeAOoOc=unfnOrUEL=KGgE32QKDww7d8g@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-06Support new default roles with adminpackStephen Frost
This provides a newer version of adminpack which works with the newly added default roles to support GRANT'ing to non-superusers access to read and write files, along with related functions (unlinking files, getting file length, renaming/removing files, scanning the log file directory) which are supported through adminpack. Note that new versions of the functions are required because an environment might have an updated version of the library but still have the old adminpack 1.0 catalog definitions (where EXECUTE is GRANT'd to PUBLIC for the functions). This patch also removes the long-deprecated alternative names for functions that adminpack used to include and which are now included in the backend, in adminpack v1.1. Applications using the deprecated names should be updated to use the backend functions instead. Existing installations which continue to use adminpack v1.0 should continue to function until/unless adminpack is upgraded. Reviewed-By: Michael Paquier Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171231191939.GR2416%40tamriel.snowman.net