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2019-10-21Deal with yet another issue related to "Norwegian (Bokmål)" locale.Tom Lane
It emerges that recent versions of Windows (at least 2016 Standard) spell this locale name as "Norwegian Bokmål_Norway.1252", defeating our mapping code that translates "Norwegian (Bokmål)_Norway" to something that's all-ASCII (cf commits db29620d4 and aa1d2fc5e). Add another mapping entry to handle this spelling. Per bug #16068 from Robert Ford. Like the previous patches, back-patch to all supported branches. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16068-4cb6eeaa7eb46d93@postgresql.org
2019-10-21Select CFLAGS_SL at configure time, not in platform-specific Makefiles.Tom Lane
Move the platform-dependent logic that sets CFLAGS_SL from src/makefiles/Makefile.foo to src/template/foo, so that the value is determined at configure time and thus is available while running configure's tests. On a couple of platforms this might save a few microseconds of build time by eliminating a test that make otherwise has to do over and over. Otherwise it's pretty much a wash for build purposes; in particular, this makes no difference to anyone who might be overriding CFLAGS_SL via a make option. This patch in itself does nothing with the value and thus should not change any behavior, though you'll probably have to re-run configure to get a correctly updated Makefile.global. We'll use the new configure variable in a follow-on patch. Per gripe from Kyotaro Horiguchi. Back-patch to all supported branches, because the follow-on patch is a portability bug fix. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20191010.144533.263180400.horikyota.ntt@gmail.com
2019-10-21Update obsolete comment.Etsuro Fujita
Commit b52b7dc25, which moved code creating PartitionBoundInfo in RelationBuildPartitionDesc() in partcache.c (relocated to partdesc.c afterwards) to partbounds.c, should have updated this, but didn't. Author: Etsuro Fujita Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera Backpatch-through: 12 Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPmGK16Uxr%3DPatiGyaRwiQVLB7Y-GqbkK3AxRLVYzU0Czv%3DsEw%40mail.gmail.com
2019-10-21Fix memory leak introduced in commit 7df159a620.Amit Kapila
We memorize all internal and empty leaf pages in the 1st vacuum stage for gist indexes. They are used in the 2nd stage, to delete all the empty pages. There was a memory context page_set_context for this purpose, but we never used it. Reported-by: Amit Kapila Author: Dilip Kumar Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila Backpatch-through: 12, where it got introduced Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1LGr+MN0xHZpJ2dfS8QNQ1a_aROKowZB+MPNep8FVtwAA@mail.gmail.com
2019-10-21Fix error reporting of connect_timeout in libpq for value parsingMichael Paquier
The logic was correctly detecting a parsing failure, but the parsing error did not get reported back to the client properly. Reported-by: Ed Morley Author: Lars Kanis Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/a9b4cbd7-4ecb-06b2-ebd7-1739bbff3217@greiz-reinsdorf.de Backpatch-through: 12
2019-10-21Fix parsing of integer values for connection parameters in libpqMichael Paquier
Commit e7a2217 has introduced stricter checks for integer values in connection parameters for libpq. However this failed to correctly check after trailing whitespaces, while leading whitespaces were discarded per the use of strtol(3). This fixes and refactors the parsing logic to handle both cases consistently. Note that trying to restrict the use of trailing whitespaces can easily break connection strings like in ECPG regression tests (these have allowed me to catch the parsing bug with connect_timeout). Author: Michael Paquier Reviewed-by: Lars Kanis Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/a9b4cbd7-4ecb-06b2-ebd7-1739bbff3217@greiz-reinsdorf.de Backpatch-through: 12
2019-10-18For PowerPC instruction "addi", use constraint "b".Noah Misch
Without "b", a variant of the tas() code miscompiles on macOS 10.4. This may also fix a compilation failure involving macOS 10.1. Today's compilers have been allocating acceptable registers with or without this change, but this future-proofs the code by precisely conveying the acceptable registers. Back-patch to 9.4 (all supported versions). Reviewed by Tom Lane. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20191009063900.GA4066266@rfd.leadboat.com
2019-10-18Fix failure of archive recovery with recovery_min_apply_delay enabled.Fujii Masao
recovery_min_apply_delay parameter is intended for use with streaming replication deployments. However, the document clearly explains that the parameter will be honored in all cases if it's specified. So it should take effect even if in archive recovery. But, previously, archive recovery with recovery_min_apply_delay enabled always failed, and caused assertion failure if --enable-caasert is enabled. The cause of this problem is that; the ownership of recoveryWakeupLatch that recovery_min_apply_delay uses was taken only when standby mode is requested. So unowned latch could be used in archive recovery, and which caused the failure. This commit changes recovery code so that the ownership of recoveryWakeupLatch is taken even in archive recovery. Which prevents archive recovery with recovery_min_apply_delay from failing. Back-patch to v9.4 where recovery_min_apply_delay was added. Author: Fujii Masao Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHGQGwEyD6HdZLfdWc+95g=VQFPR4zQL4n+yHxQgGEGjaSVheQ@mail.gmail.com
2019-10-18Make crash recovery ignore recovery_min_apply_delay setting.Fujii Masao
In v11 or before, this setting could not take effect in crash recovery because it's specified in recovery.conf and crash recovery always starts without recovery.conf. But commit 2dedf4d9a8 integrated recovery.conf into postgresql.conf and which unexpectedly allowed this setting to take effect even in crash recovery. This is definitely not good behavior. To fix the issue, this commit makes crash recovery always ignore recovery_min_apply_delay setting. Back-patch to v12 where the issue was added. Author: Fujii Masao Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHGQGwEyD6HdZLfdWc+95g=VQFPR4zQL4n+yHxQgGEGjaSVheQ@mail.gmail.com Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/e445616d-023e-a268-8aa1-67b8b335340c@pgmasters.net
2019-10-18Fix typoAlvaro Herrera
Apparently while this code was being developed, ReindexRelationConcurrently operated on multiple relations. The version that was ultimately pushed doesn't, so this comment's use of plural is inaccurate.
2019-10-18Update comments about progress reporting by index_dropAlvaro Herrera
Michaël Paquier complained that index_drop is requesting progress reporting for non-obvious reasons, so let's add a comment to explain why. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20191017010412.GH2602@paquier.xyz
2019-10-18Fix timeout handling in logical replication workerMichael Paquier
The timestamp tracking the last moment a message is received in a logical replication worker was initialized in each loop checking if a message was received or not, causing wal_receiver_timeout to be ignored in basically any logical replication deployments. This also broke the ping sent to the server when reaching half of wal_receiver_timeout. This simply moves the initialization of the timestamp out of the apply loop to the beginning of LogicalRepApplyLoop(). Reported-by: Jehan-Guillaume De Rorthais Author: Julien Rouhaud Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAOBaU_ZHESFcWva8jLjtZdCLspMj7vqaB2k++rjHLY897ZxbYw@mail.gmail.com Backpatch-through: 10
2019-10-17Fix minor bug in logical-replication walsender shutdownAlvaro Herrera
Logical walsender should exit when it catches up with sending WAL during shutdown; but there was a rare corner case when it failed to because of a race condition that puts it back to wait for more WAL instead -- but since there wasn't any, it'd not shut down immediately. It would only continue the shutdown when wal_sender_timeout terminates the sleep, which causes annoying waits during shutdown procedure. Restructure the code so that we no longer forget to set WalSndCaughtUp in that case. This was an oversight in commit c6c333436. Backpatch all the way down to 9.4. Author: Craig Ringer, Álvaro Herrera Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMsr+YEuz4XwZX_QmnX_-2530XhyAmnK=zCmicEnq1vLr0aZ-g@mail.gmail.com
2019-10-17Fix parallel restore of FKs to partitioned tablesAlvaro Herrera
When an FK constraint is created, it needs the index on the referenced table to exist and be valid. When doing parallel pg_restore and the referenced table was partitioned, this condition can sometimes not be met, because pg_dump didn't emit sufficient object dependencies to ensure so; this means that parallel pg_restore would fail in certain conditions. Fix by having pg_dump make the FK constraint object dependent on the partition attachment objects for the constraint's referenced index. This has been broken since f56f8f8da6af, so backpatch to Postgres 12. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20191005224333.GA9738@alvherre.pgsql
2019-10-17When restoring GUCs in parallel workers, show an error context.Thomas Munro
Otherwise it can be hard to see where an error is coming from, when the parallel worker sets all the GUCs that it received from the leader. Bug #15726. Back-patch to 9.5, where RestoreGUCState() appeared. Reported-by: Tiago Anastacio Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson, Tom Lane Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15726-6d67e4fa14f027b3%40postgresql.org
2019-10-17Fix bug that could try to freeze running multixacts.Thomas Munro
Commits 801c2dc7 and 801c2dc7 made it possible for vacuum to try to freeze a multixact that is still running. That was prevented by a check, but raised an error. Repair. Back-patch all the way. Author: Nathan Bossart, Jeremy Schneider Reported-by: Jeremy Schneider Reviewed-by: Jim Nasby, Thomas Munro Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/DAFB8AFF-2F05-4E33-AD7F-FF8B0F760C17%40amazon.com
2019-10-16Fix crash when reporting CREATE INDEX progressAlvaro Herrera
A race condition can make us try to dereference a NULL pointer to the PGPROC struct of a process that's already finished. That results in crashes during REINDEX CONCURRENTLY and CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY. This was introduced in ab0dfc961b6a, so backpatch to pg12. Reported by: Justin Pryzby Reviewed-by: Michaël Paquier Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20191012004446.GT10470@telsasoft.com
2019-10-16Improve the check for pg_catalog.unknown data type in pg_upgradeTomas Vondra
The pg_upgrade check for pg_catalog.unknown type when upgrading from 9.6 had a couple of issues with domains and composite types - it detected even composite types unused in objects with storage. So for example this was enough to trigger an unnecessary pg_upgrade failure: CREATE TYPE unknown_composite AS (u pg_catalog.unknown) On the other hand, this only happened with composite types directly on the pg_catalog.unknown data type, but not with a domain. So this was not detected CREATE DOMAIN unknown_domain AS pg_catalog.unknown; CREATE TYPE unknown_composite_2 AS (u unknown_domain); unlike the first example. These false positives and inconsistencies are unfortunate, but what's worse we've failed to detected objects using the pg_catalog.unknown type through a domain. So we missed cases like this CREATE TABLE t (u unknown_composite_2); The consequence is clusters broken after a pg_upgrade. This fixes these false positives and false negatives by using the same recursive CTE introduced by eaf900e842 for sql_identifier. Backpatch all the way to 10, where the of pg_catalog.unknown data type was restricted. Author: Tomas Vondra Backpatch-to: 10- Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16045-673e8fa6b5ace196%40postgresql.org
2019-10-16Improve the check for pg_catalog.line data type in pg_upgradeTomas Vondra
The pg_upgrade check for pg_catalog.line data type when upgrading from 9.3 had a couple of issues with domains and composite types. Firstly, it triggered false positives for composite types unused in objects with storage. This was enough to trigger an unnecessary pg_upgrade failure: CREATE TYPE line_composite AS (l pg_catalog.line) On the other hand, this only happened with composite types directly on the pg_catalog.line data type, but not with a domain. So this was not detected CREATE DOMAIN line_domain AS pg_catalog.line; CREATE TYPE line_composite_2 AS (l line_domain); unlike the first example. These false positives and inconsistencies are unfortunate, but what's worse we've failed to detected objects using the pg_catalog.line data type through a domain. So we missed cases like this CREATE TABLE t (l line_composite_2); The consequence is clusters broken after a pg_upgrade. This fixes these false positives and false negatives by using the same recursive CTE introduced by eaf900e842 for sql_identifier. 9.3 did not support domains on composite types, but we can still have multi-level composite types. Backpatch all the way to 9.4, where the format for pg_catalog.line data type changed. Author: Tomas Vondra Backpatch-to: 9.4- Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16045-673e8fa6b5ace196%40postgresql.org
2019-10-16Replace alter_table.sql test usage of event triggers.Andres Freund
The test in 93765bd956b added an event trigger to ensure that the tested table rewrites do not get optimized away (as happened in the past). But doing so would require running the tests in isolation, as otherwise the trigger might also fire in concurrent sessions, causing test failures there. Reported-By: Tom Lane Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3328.1570740683@sss.pgh.pa.us Backpatch: 12, just as 93765bd956b
2019-10-15Fix CLUSTER on expression indexes.Andres Freund
Since the introduction of different slot types, in 1a0586de3657, we create a virtual slot in tuplesort_begin_cluster(). While that looks right, it unfortunately doesn't actually work, as ExecStoreHeapTuple() is used to store tuples in the slot. Unfortunately no regression tests for CLUSTER on expression indexes existed so far. Fix the slot type, and add bare bones tests for CLUSTER on expression indexes. Reported-By: Justin Pryzby Author: Andres Freund Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20191011210320.GS10470@telsasoft.com Backpatch: 12, like 1a0586de3657
2019-10-15Correct reference to pg_catalog.regtype in pg_upgrade queryTomas Vondra
The recursive CTE added in 0ccfc28223 referenced pg_catalog.regtype, without the schema part, unlike all other queries in pg_upgrade. Backpatch-to: 12
2019-10-14Check for tables with sql_identifier during pg_upgradeTomas Vondra
Commit 7c15cef86d changed sql_identifier data type to be based on name instead of varchar. Unfortunately, this breaks on-disk format for this data type. Luckily, that should be a very rare problem, as this data type is used only in information_schema views, so this only affects user objects (tables, materialized views and indexes). One way to end in such situation is to do CTAS with a query on those system views. There are two options to deal with this - we can either abort pg_upgrade if there are user objects with sql_identifier columns in pg_upgrade, or we could replace the sql_identifier type with varchar. Considering how rare the issue is expected to be, and the complexity of replacing the data type (e.g. in matviews), we've decided to go with the simple check. The query is somewhat complex - the sql_identifier data type may be used indirectly - through a domain, a composite type or both, possibly in multiple levels. Detecting this requires a recursive CTE. Backpatch to 12, where the sql_identifier definition changed. Reported-by: Hans Buschmann Author: Tomas Vondra Reviewed-by: Tom Lane Backpatch-to: 12 Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16045-673e8fa6b5ace196%40postgresql.org
2019-10-13Fix dependency handling of column drop with partitioned tablesMichael Paquier
When dropping a column on a partitioned table which has one or more partitioned indexes, the operation was failing as dependencies with partitioned indexes using the column dropped were not getting removed in a way consistent with the columns involved across all the relations part of an inheritance tree. This commit refactors the code executing column drop so as all the columns from an inheritance tree to remove are gathered first, and dropped all at the end. This way, we let the dependency machinery sort out by itself the deletion of all the columns with the partitioned indexes across a partition tree. This issue has been introduced by 1d92a0c, so backpatch down to REL_12_STABLE. Author: Amit Langote, Michael Paquier Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera, Ashutosh Sharma Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+HiwqE9kuBsZ3b5pob2-cvE8ofzPWs-og+g8bKKGnu6b4-yTQ@mail.gmail.com Backpatch-through: 12
2019-10-12AIX: Stop adding option -qsrcmsg.Noah Misch
With xlc v16.1.0, it causes internal compiler errors. With xlc versions not exhibiting that bug, removing -qsrcmsg merely changes the compiler error reporting format. Back-patch to 9.4 (all supported versions). Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20191003064105.GA3955242@rfd.leadboat.com
2019-10-11Make crash recovery ignore restore_command and recovery_end_command settings.Fujii Masao
In v11 or before, those settings could not take effect in crash recovery because they are specified in recovery.conf and crash recovery always starts without recovery.conf. But commit 2dedf4d9a8 integrated recovery.conf into postgresql.conf and which unexpectedly allowed those settings to take effect even in crash recovery. This is definitely not good behavior. To fix the issue, this commit makes crash recovery always ignore restore_command and recovery_end_command settings. Back-patch to v12 where the issue was added. Author: Fujii Masao Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/e445616d-023e-a268-8aa1-67b8b335340c@pgmasters.net
2019-10-10Put back pqsignal() as an exported libpq symbol.Tom Lane
This reverts commit f7ab80285. Per discussion, we can't remove an exported symbol without a SONAME bump, which we don't want to do. In particular that breaks usage of current libpq.so with pre-9.3 versions of psql etc, which need libpq to export pqsignal(). As noted in that commit message, exporting the symbol from libpgport.a won't work reliably; but actually we don't want to export src/port's implementation anyway. Any pre-9.3 client is going to be expecting the definition that pqsignal() had before 9.3, which was that it didn't set SA_RESTART for SIGALRM. Hence, put back pqsignal() in a separate source file in src/interfaces/libpq, and give it the old semantics. Back-patch to v12. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1g5vmT-0003K1-6S@gemulon.postgresql.org
2019-10-09Fix table rewrites that include a column without a default.Andres Freund
In c2fe139c201c I made ATRewriteTable() use tuple slots. Unfortunately I did not notice that columns can be added in a rewrite that do not have a default, when another column is added/altered requiring one. Initialize columns to NULL again, and add tests. Bug: #16038 Reported-By: anonymous Author: Andres Freund Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16038-5c974541f2bf6749@postgresql.org Backpatch: 12, where the bug was introduced in c2fe139c201c
2019-10-09Flush logical mapping files with fd opened for read/write at checkpointMichael Paquier
The file descriptor was opened with read-only to fsync a regular file, which would cause EBADFD errors on some platforms. This is similar to the recent fix done by a586cc4b (which was broken by me with 82a5649), except that I noticed this issue while monitoring the backend code for similar mistakes. Backpatch to 9.4, as this has been introduced since logical decoding exists as of b89e151. Author: Michael Paquier Reviewed-by: Andres Freund Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20191006045548.GA14532@paquier.xyz Backpatch-through: 9.4
2019-10-07Check for too many postmaster children before spawning a bgworker.Tom Lane
The postmaster's code path for spawning a bgworker neglected to check whether we already have the max number of live child processes. That's a bit hard to hit, since it would necessarily be a transient condition; but if we do, AssignPostmasterChildSlot() fails causing a postmaster crash, as seen in a report from Bhargav Kamineni. To fix, invoke canAcceptConnections() in the bgworker code path, as we do in the other code paths that spawn children. Since we don't want the same pmState tests in this case, add a child-process-type parameter to canAcceptConnections() so that it can know what to do. Back-patch to 9.5. In principle the same hazard exists in 9.4, but the code is enough different that this patch wouldn't quite fix it there. Given the tiny usage of bgworkers in that branch it doesn't seem worth creating a variant patch for it. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18733.1570382257@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-10-05Report test_atomic_ops() failures consistently, via macros.Noah Misch
This prints the unexpected value in more failure cases, and it removes forty-eight hand-maintained error messages. Back-patch to 9.5, which introduced these tests. Reviewed (in an earlier version) by Andres Freund. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190915160021.GA24376@alvherre.pgsql
2019-10-05Avoid use of wildcard in pg_waldump's .gitignore.Tom Lane
This would be all right, maybe, if it didn't also match a file that definitely should not be ignored. We don't add rmgrs so often that manual maintenance of this file list is impractical, so just write out the list. (I find the equivalent wildcard use in the Makefile pretty lazy and unsafe as well, but will leave that alone until it actually causes a problem.) Per bug #16042 from Denis Stuchalin. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16042-c174ee692ac21cbd@postgresql.org
2019-10-05Disable one more set of tests from c8841199509.Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20191004222437.45qmglpto43pd3jb@alap3.anarazel.de Backpatch: 9.6-, just like c8841199509 and 6e61d75f525
2019-10-04Disable one set of tests from c8841199509.Andres Freund
One of the upsert related tests is unstable (sometimes even hanging until isolationtester's step timeout is reached). Based on preliminary analysis that might be a problem outside of just that test, but not really related to EPQ and triggers. Disable for now, to get the buildfarm greener again. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20191004222437.45qmglpto43pd3jb@alap3.anarazel.de Backpatch: 9.6-, just like c8841199509.
2019-10-04Add isolation tests for the combination of EPQ and triggers.Andres Freund
As evidenced by bug #16036 this area is woefully under-tested. Add fairly extensive tests for the combination. Backpatch back to 9.6 - before that isolationtester was not capable enough. While we don't backpatch tests all the time, future fixes to trigger.c would potentially look different enough in 12+ from the earlier branches that introducing bugs during backpatching is more likely than normal. Also, it's just a crucial and undertested area of the code. Author: Andres Freund Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16036-28184c90d952fb7f@postgresql.org Backpatch: 9.6-, the earliest these tests work
2019-10-04Fix crash caused by EPQ happening with a before update trigger present.Andres Freund
When ExecBRUpdateTriggers()'s GetTupleForTrigger() follows an EPQ chain the former needs to run the result tuple through the junkfilter again, and update the slot containing the new version of the tuple to contain that new version. The input tuple may already be in the junkfilter's output slot, which used to be OK - we don't need the previous version anymore. Unfortunately ff11e7f4b9ae started to use ExecCopySlot() to update newslot, and ExecCopySlot() doesn't support copying a slot into itself, leading to a slot in a corrupt state, which then can cause crashes or other symptoms. Fix this by skipping the ExecCopySlot() when copying into itself. While we could have easily made ExecCopySlot() handle that case, it seems better to add an assert forbidding doing so instead. As the goal of copying might be to make the contents of one slot independent from another, it seems failure prone to handle doing so silently. A follow-up commit will add tests for the obviously under-covered combination of EPQ and triggers. Done as a separate commit as it might make sense to backpatch them further than this bug. Also remove confusion with confusing variable names for slots in ExecBRDeleteTriggers() and ExecBRUpdateTriggers(). Bug: #16036 Reported-By: Антон Власов Author: Andres Freund Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16036-28184c90d952fb7f@postgresql.org Backpatch: 12-, where ff11e7f4b9ae was merged
2019-10-04Use a fd opened for read/write when syncing slots during startup, take 2.Andres Freund
Cribbing from dfbaed45975: Some operating systems, including the reporter's windows, return EBADFD or similar when fsync() is invoked on a O_RDONLY file descriptor. Unfortunately RestoreSlotFromDisk() does exactly that; which causes failures after restarts in at least some scenarios. If you hit the bug the error message will be something like ERROR: could not fsync file "pg_replslot/$name/state": Bad file descriptor Simply use O_RDWR instead of O_RDONLY when opening the relevant file descriptor to fix the bug. Unfortunately this fix was undone in 82a5649fb9db. Re-apply, and add a comment. Bug: 16039 Reported-By: Hans Buschmann Author: Andres Freund Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16039-196fc97cc05e141c@postgresql.org Backpatch: 12-, as 82a5649fb9db
2019-10-04Handle spaces in OpenSSL install location for MSVCAndrew Dunstan
First, make sure that the .exe name is quoted when trying to get the version number. Also, don't quote the lib name for using in the project files if it's already been quoted. This second change applies to all libraries, not just OpenSSL. This has clearly been broken forever, so backpatch to all live branches.
2019-10-04Fix bitshiftright()'s zero-padding some more.Tom Lane
Commit 5ac0d9360 failed to entirely fix bitshiftright's habit of leaving one-bits in the pad space that should be all zeroes, because in a moment of sheer brain fade I'd concluded that only the code path used for not-a-multiple-of-8 shift distances needed to be fixed. Of course, a multiple-of-8 shift distance can also cause the problem, so we need to forcibly zero the extra bits in both cases. Per bug #16037 from Alexander Lakhin. As before, back-patch to all supported branches. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16037-1d1ebca564db54f4@postgresql.org
2019-10-04Fix --dry-run mode of pg_rewindMichael Paquier
Even if --dry-run mode was specified, the control file was getting updated, preventing follow-up runs of pg_rewind to work properly on the target data folder. The origin of the problem came from the refactoring done by ce6afc6. Author: Alexey Kondratov Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7ca88204-3e0b-2f4c-c8af-acadc4b266e5@postgrespro.ru Backpatch-through: 12
2019-10-03Avoid unnecessary out-of-memory errors during encoding conversion.Tom Lane
Encoding conversion uses the very simplistic rule that the output can't be more than 4X longer than the input, and palloc's a buffer of that size. This results in failure to convert any string longer than 1/4 GB, which is becoming an annoying limitation. As a band-aid to improve matters, allow the allocated output buffer size to exceed 1GB. We still insist that the final result fit into MaxAllocSize (1GB), though. Perhaps it'd be safe to relax that restriction, but it'd require close analysis of all callers, which is daunting (not least because external modules might call these functions). For the moment, this should allow a 2X to 4X improvement in the longest string we can convert, which is a useful gain in return for quite a simple patch. Also, once we have successfully converted a long string, repalloc the output down to the actual string length, returning the excess to the malloc pool. This seems worth doing since we can usually expect to give back several MB if we take this path at all. This still leaves much to be desired, most notably that the assumption that MAX_CONVERSION_GROWTH == 4 is very fragile, and yet we have no guard code verifying that the output buffer isn't overrun. Fixing that would require significant changes in the encoding conversion APIs, so it'll have to wait for some other day. The present patch seems safely back-patchable, so patch all supported branches. Alvaro Herrera and Tom Lane Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190816181418.GA898@alvherre.pgsql Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3614.1569359690@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-10-03Allow repalloc() to give back space when a large chunk is downsized.Tom Lane
Up to now, if you resized a large (>8K) palloc chunk down to a smaller size, aset.c made no attempt to return any space to the malloc pool. That's unpleasant if a really large allocation is resized to a significantly smaller size. I think no such cases existed when this code was designed, and I'm not sure whether they're common even yet, but an upcoming fix to encoding conversion will certainly create such cases. Therefore, fix AllocSetRealloc so that it gives realloc() a chance to do something with the block. This doesn't noticeably increase complexity, we mostly just have to change the order in which the cases are considered. Back-patch to all supported branches. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190816181418.GA898@alvherre.pgsql Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3614.1569359690@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-10-03Selectively include window frames in expression walks/mutates.Andrew Gierth
query_tree_walker and query_tree_mutator were skipping the windowClause of the query, without regard for the fact that the startOffset and endOffset in a WindowClause node are expression trees that need to be processed. This was an oversight in commit ec4be2ee6 from 2010 which added the expression fields; the main symptom is that function parameters in window frame clauses don't work in inlined functions. Fix (as conservatively as possible since this needs to not break existing out-of-tree callers) and add tests. Backpatch all the way, since this has been broken since 9.0. Per report from Alastair McKinley; fix by me with kibitzing and review from Tom Lane. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/DB6PR0202MB2904E7FDDA9D81504D1E8C68E3800@DB6PR0202MB2904.eurprd02.prod.outlook.com
2019-10-02Remove temporary WAL and history files at the end of archive recoveryMichael Paquier
cbc55da has reworked the order of some actions at the end of archive recovery. Unfortunately this overlooked the fact that the startup process needs to remove RECOVERYXLOG (for temporary WAL segment newly recovered from archives) and RECOVERYHISTORY (for temporary history file) at this step, leaving the files around even after recovery ended. Backpatch to 9.5, like the previous commit. Author: Sawada Masahiko Reviewed-by: Fujii Masao, Michael Paquier Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoBO_eDQub6zojFnWtnmutRBWvYf7=cW4Hsqj+U_R26w3Q@mail.gmail.com Backpatch-through: 9.5
2019-09-30Stamp 12.0.REL_12_0Tom Lane
2019-09-30Suppress another CR in program outputAndrew Dunstan
This one was exposed by a12c75a10. Backpatch to release 11 where check_pg_config was introduced.
2019-09-30Make crash recovery ignore recovery target settings.Fujii Masao
In v11 or before, recovery target settings could not take effect in crash recovery because they are specified in recovery.conf and crash recovery always starts without recovery.conf. But commit 2dedf4d9a8 integrated recovery.conf into postgresql.conf and which unexpectedly allowed recovery target settings to take effect even in crash recovery. This is definitely not good behavior. To fix the issue, this commit makes crash recovery always ignore recovery target settings. Back-patch to v12. Author: Peter Eisentraut Reviewed-by: Fujii Masao Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/e445616d-023e-a268-8aa1-67b8b335340c@pgmasters.net
2019-09-29jit: Re-allow JIT compilation of execGrouping.c hashtable comparisons.Andres Freund
In the course of 5567d12ce03, 356687bd8 and 317ffdfeaac, I changed BuildTupleHashTable[Ext]'s call to ExecBuildGroupingEqual to not pass in the parent node, but NULL. Which in turn prevents the tuple equality comparator from being JIT compiled. While that fixes bug #15486, it is not actually necessary after all of the above commits, as we don't re-build the comparator when using the new BuildTupleHashTableExt() interface (as the content of the hashtable are reset, but the TupleHashTable itself is not). Therefore re-allow jit compilation for callers that use BuildTupleHashTableExt with a separate context for "metadata" and content. As in the previous commit, there's ongoing work to make this easier to test to prevent such regressions in the future, but that infrastructure is not going to be backpatchable. The performance impact of not JIT compiling hashtable equality comparators can be substantial e.g. for aggregation queries that aggregate a lot of input rows to few output rows (when there are a lot of output groups, there will be fewer comparisons). Author: Andres Freund Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190927072053.njf6prdl3vb7y7qb@alap3.anarazel.de Backpatch: 11, just as 5567d12ce03
2019-09-29Fix determination when slot types for upper executor nodes are fixed.Andres Freund
For many queries the fact that the tuple descriptor from the lower node was not taken into account when determining whether the type of a slot is fixed, lead to tuple deforming for such upper nodes not to be JIT accelerated. I broke this in 675af5c01e297. There is ongoing work to enable writing regression tests for related behavior (including a patch that would have detected this regression), by optionally showing such details in EXPLAIN. But as it seems unlikely that that will be suitable for stable branches, just merge the fix for now. While it's fairly close to the 12 release window, the fact that 11 continues to perform JITed tuple deforming in these cases, that there's still cases where we do so in 12, and the fact that the performance regression can be sizable, weigh in favor of fixing it now. Author: Andres Freund Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190927072053.njf6prdl3vb7y7qb@alap3.anarazel.de Backpatch: 12-, where 675af5c01e297 was merged.
2019-09-29Translation updatesPeter Eisentraut
Source-Git-URL: https://git.postgresql.org/git/pgtranslation/messages.git Source-Git-Hash: 1d66650d203c89e3c69a18be3b4361f5a5393fcf