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2015-10-05Re-Align *_freeze_max_age reloption limits with corresponding GUC limits.Andres Freund
In 020235a5754 I lowered the autovacuum_*freeze_max_age minimums to allow for easier testing of wraparounds. I did not touch the corresponding per-table limits. While those don't matter for the purpose of wraparound, it seems more consistent to lower them as well. It's noteworthy that the previous reloption lower limit for autovacuum_multixact_freeze_max_age was too high by one magnitude, even before 020235a5754. Discussion: 26377.1443105453@sss.pgh.pa.us Backpatch: back to 9.0 (in parts), like the prior patch
2015-10-04Further twiddling of nodeHash.c hashtable sizing calculation.Tom Lane
On reflection, the submitted patch didn't really work to prevent the request size from exceeding MaxAllocSize, because of the fact that we'd happily round nbuckets up to the next power of 2 after we'd limited it to max_pointers. The simplest way to enforce the limit correctly is to round max_pointers down to a power of 2 when it isn't one already. (Note that the constraint to INT_MAX / 2, if it were doing anything useful at all, is properly applied after that.)
2015-10-04Fix possible "invalid memory alloc request size" failure in nodeHash.c.Tom Lane
Limit the size of the hashtable pointer array to not more than MaxAllocSize. We've seen reports of failures due to this in HEAD/9.5, and it seems possible in older branches as well. The change in NTUP_PER_BUCKET in 9.5 may have made the problem more likely, but surely it didn't introduce it. Tomas Vondra, slightly modified by me
2015-10-02Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2015g.Tom Lane
DST law changes in Cayman Islands, Fiji, Moldova, Morocco, Norfolk Island, North Korea, Turkey, Uruguay. New zone America/Fort_Nelson for Canadian Northern Rockies.
2015-10-02Add recursion depth protection to LIKE matching.Tom Lane
Since MatchText() recurses, it could in principle be driven to stack overflow, although quite a long pattern would be needed.
2015-10-02Add recursion depth protections to regular expression matching.Tom Lane
Some of the functions in regex compilation and execution recurse, and therefore could in principle be driven to stack overflow. The Tcl crew has seen this happen in practice in duptraverse(), though their fix was to put in a hard-wired limit on the number of recursive levels, which is not too appetizing --- fortunately, we have enough infrastructure to check the actually available stack. Greg Stark has also seen it in other places while fuzz testing on a machine with limited stack space. Let's put guards in to prevent crashes in all these places. Since the regex code would leak memory if we simply threw elog(ERROR), we have to introduce an API that checks for stack depth without throwing such an error. Fortunately that's not difficult.
2015-10-02Fix potential infinite loop in regular expression execution.Tom Lane
In cfindloop(), if the initial call to shortest() reports that a zero-length match is possible at the current search start point, but then it is unable to construct any actual match to that, it'll just loop around with the same start point, and thus make no progress. We need to force the start point to be advanced. This is safe because the loop over "begin" points has already tried and failed to match starting at "close", so there is surely no need to try that again. This bug was introduced in commit e2bd904955e2221eddf01110b1f25002de2aaa83, wherein we allowed continued searching after we'd run out of match possibilities, but evidently failed to think hard enough about exactly where we needed to search next. Because of the way this code works, such a match failure is only possible in the presence of backrefs --- otherwise, shortest()'s judgment that a match is possible should always be correct. That probably explains how come the bug has escaped detection for several years. The actual fix is a one-liner, but I took the trouble to add/improve some comments related to the loop logic. After fixing that, the submitted test case "()*\1" didn't loop anymore. But it reported failure, though it seems like it ought to match a zero-length string; both Tcl and Perl think it does. That seems to be from overenthusiastic optimization on my part when I rewrote the iteration match logic in commit 173e29aa5deefd9e71c183583ba37805c8102a72: we can't just "declare victory" for a zero-length match without bothering to set match data for capturing parens inside the iterator node. Per fuzz testing by Greg Stark. The first part of this is a bug in all supported branches, and the second part is a bug since 9.2 where the iteration rewrite happened.
2015-10-02Add some more query-cancel checks to regular expression matching.Tom Lane
Commit 9662143f0c35d64d7042fbeaf879df8f0b54be32 added infrastructure to allow regular-expression operations to be terminated early in the event of SIGINT etc. However, fuzz testing by Greg Stark disclosed that there are still cases where regex compilation could run for a long time without noticing a cancel request. Specifically, the fixempties() phase never adds new states, only new arcs, so it doesn't hit the cancel check I'd put in newstate(). Add one to newarc() as well to cover that. Some experimentation of my own found that regex execution could also run for a long time despite a pending cancel. We'd put a high-level cancel check into cdissect(), but there was none inside the core text-matching routines longest() and shortest(). Ordinarily those inner loops are very very fast ... but in the presence of lookahead constraints, not so much. As a compromise, stick a cancel check into the stateset cache-miss function, which is enough to guarantee a cancel check at least once per lookahead constraint test. Making this work required more attention to error handling throughout the regex executor. Henry Spencer had apparently originally intended longest() and shortest() to be incapable of incurring errors while running, so neither they nor their subroutines had well-defined error reporting behaviors. However, that was already broken by the lookahead constraint feature, since lacon() can surely suffer an out-of-memory failure --- which, in the code as it stood, might never be reported to the user at all, but just silently be treated as a non-match of the lookahead constraint. Normalize all that by inserting explicit error tests as needed. I took the opportunity to add some more comments to the code, too. Back-patch to all supported branches, like the previous patch.
2015-10-01Fix pg_dump to handle inherited NOT VALID check constraints correctly.Tom Lane
This case seems to have been overlooked when unvalidated check constraints were introduced, in 9.2. The code would attempt to dump such constraints over again for each child table, even though adding them to the parent table is sufficient. In 9.2 and 9.3, also fix contrib/pg_upgrade/Makefile so that the "make clean" target fully cleans up after a failed test. This evidently got dealt with at some point in 9.4, but it wasn't back-patched. I ran into it while testing this fix ... Per bug #13656 from Ingmar Brouns.
2015-10-01Fix documentation error in commit 8703059c6b55c427100e00a09f66534b6ccbfaa1.Tom Lane
Etsuro Fujita spotted a thinko in the README commentary.
2015-09-30Improve LISTEN startup time when there are many unread notifications.Tom Lane
If some existing listener is far behind, incoming new listener sessions would start from that session's read pointer and then need to advance over many already-committed notification messages, which they have no interest in. This was expensive in itself and also thrashed the pg_notify SLRU buffers a lot more than necessary. We can improve matters considerably in typical scenarios, without much added cost, by starting from the furthest-ahead read pointer, not the furthest-behind one. We do have to consider only sessions in our own database when doing this, which requires an extra field in the data structure, but that's a pretty small cost. Back-patch to 9.0 where the current LISTEN/NOTIFY logic was introduced. Matt Newell, slightly adjusted by me
2015-09-29Fix plperl to handle non-ASCII error message texts correctly.Tom Lane
We were passing error message texts to croak() verbatim, which turns out not to work if the text contains non-ASCII characters; Perl mangles their encoding, as reported in bug #13638 from Michal Leinweber. To fix, convert the text into a UTF8-encoded SV first. It's hard to test this without risking failures in different database encodings; but we can follow the lead of plpython, which is already assuming that no-break space (U+00A0) has an equivalent in all encodings we care about running the regression tests in (cf commit 2dfa15de5). Back-patch to 9.1. The code is quite different in 9.0, and anyway it seems too risky to put something like this into 9.0's final minor release. Alex Hunsaker, with suggestions from Tim Bunce and Tom Lane
2015-09-28Fix compiler warning about unused function in non-readline case.Andrew Dunstan
Backpatch to all live branches to keep the code in sync.
2015-09-25Further fix for psql's code for locale-aware formatting of numeric output.Tom Lane
(Third time's the charm, I hope.) Additional testing disclosed that this code could mangle already-localized output from the "money" datatype. We can't very easily skip applying it to "money" values, because the logic is tied to column right-justification and people expect "money" output to be right-justified. Short of decoupling that, we can fix it in what should be a safe enough way by testing to make sure the string doesn't contain any characters that would not be expected in plain numeric output.
2015-09-25Further fix for psql's code for locale-aware formatting of numeric output.Tom Lane
On closer inspection, those seemingly redundant atoi() calls were not so much inefficient as just plain wrong: the author of this code either had not read, or had not understood, the POSIX specification for localeconv(). The grouping field is *not* a textual digit string but separate integers encoded as chars. We'll follow the existing code as well as the backend's cash.c in only honoring the first group width, but let's at least honor it correctly. This doesn't actually result in any behavioral change in any of the locales I have installed on my Linux box, which may explain why nobody's complained; grouping width 3 is close enough to universal that it's barely worth considering other cases. Still, wrong is wrong, so back-patch.
2015-09-24Fix psql's code for locale-aware formatting of numeric output.Tom Lane
This code did the wrong thing entirely for numbers with an exponent but no decimal point (e.g., '1e6'), as reported by Jeff Janes in bug #13636. More generally, it made lots of unverified assumptions about what the input string could possibly look like. Rearrange so that it only fools with leading digits that it's directly verified are there, and an immediately adjacent decimal point. While at it, get rid of some useless inefficiencies, like converting the grouping count string to integer over and over (and over). This has been broken for a long time, so back-patch to all supported branches.
2015-09-24Lower *_freeze_max_age minimum values.Andres Freund
The old minimum values are rather large, making it time consuming to test related behaviour. Additionally the current limits, especially for multixacts, can be problematic in space-constrained systems. 10000000 multixacts can contain a lot of members. Since there's no good reason for the current limits, lower them a good bit. Setting them to 0 would be a bad idea, triggering endless vacuums, so still retain a limit. While at it fix autovacuum_multixact_freeze_max_age to refer to multixact.c instead of varsup.c. Reviewed-By: Robert Haas Discussion: CA+TgmoYmQPHcrc3GSs7vwvrbTkbcGD9Gik=OztbDGGrovkkEzQ@mail.gmail.com Backpatch: 9.0 (in parts)
2015-09-21Fix possible internal overflow in numeric multiplication.Tom Lane
mul_var() postpones propagating carries until it risks overflow in its internal digit array. However, the logic failed to account for the possibility of overflow in the carry propagation step, allowing wrong results to be generated in corner cases. We must slightly reduce the when-to-propagate-carries threshold to avoid that. Discovered and fixed by Dean Rasheed, with small adjustments by me. This has been wrong since commit d72f6c75038d8d37e64a29a04b911f728044d83b, so back-patch to all supported branches.
2015-09-20Restrict file mode creation mask during tmpfile().Noah Misch
Per Coverity. Back-patch to 9.0 (all supported versions). Michael Paquier, reviewed (in earlier versions) by Heikki Linnakangas.
2015-09-20Be more wary about partially-valid LOCALLOCK data in RemoveLocalLock().Tom Lane
RemoveLocalLock() must consider the possibility that LockAcquireExtended() failed to palloc the initial space for a locallock's lockOwners array. I had evidently meant to cope with this hazard when the code was originally written (commit 1785acebf2ed14fd66955e2d9a55d77a025f418d), but missed that the pfree needed to be protected with an if-test. Just to make sure things are left in a clean state, reset numLockOwners as well. Per low-memory testing by Andreas Seltenreich. Back-patch to all supported branches.
2015-09-19Let compiler handle size calculation of bool types.Michael Meskes
Back in the day this did not work, but modern compilers should handle it themselves.
2015-09-18Fix low-probability memory leak in regex execution.Tom Lane
After an internal failure in shortest() or longest() while pinning down the exact location of a match, find() forgot to free the DFA structure before returning. This is pretty unlikely to occur, since we just successfully ran the "search" variant of the DFA; but it could happen, and it would result in a session-lifespan memory leak since this code uses malloc() directly. Problem seems to have been aboriginal in Spencer's library, so back-patch all the way. In passing, correct a thinko in a comment I added awhile back about the meaning of the "ntree" field. I happened across these issues while comparing our code to Tcl's version of the library.
2015-09-12Remove set-but-not-used variable.Tom Lane
In branches before 9.3, commit 8703059c6 caused join_is_legal()'s unique_ified variable to become unused, since its only remaining use is for LATERAL-related tests which don't exist pre-9.3. My compiler didn't complain about that, but Peter's does.
2015-09-11pg_dump, pg_upgrade: allow postgres/template1 tablespace movesBruce Momjian
Modify pg_dump to restore postgres/template1 databases to non-default tablespaces by switching out of the database to be moved, then switching back. Also, to fix potentially cases where the old/new tablespaces might not match, fix pg_upgrade to process new/old tablespaces separately in all cases. Report by Marti Raudsepp Patch by Marti Raudsepp, me Backpatch through 9.0
2015-09-10Fix setrefs.c comment properly.Tom Lane
The "typo" alleged in commit 1e460d4bd was actually a comment that was correct when written, but I missed updating it in commit b5282aa89. Use a slightly less specific (and hopefully more future-proof) description of what is collected. Back-patch to 9.2 where that commit appeared, and revert the comment to its then-entirely-correct state before that.
2015-09-10Fix typo in setrefs.cStephen Frost
We're adding OIDs, not TIDs, to invalItems. Pointed out by Etsuro Fujita. Back-patch to all supported branches.
2015-09-09Fix minor bug in regexp makesearch() function.Tom Lane
The list-wrangling here was done wrong, allowing the same state to get put into the list twice. The following loop then would clone it twice. The second clone would wind up with no inarcs, so that there was no observable misbehavior AFAICT, but a useless state in the finished NFA isn't an especially good thing.
2015-09-09Remove files signaling a standby promotion request at postmaster startupFujii Masao
This commit makes postmaster forcibly remove the files signaling a standby promotion request. Otherwise, the existence of those files can trigger a promotion too early, whether a user wants that or not. This removal of files is usually unnecessary because they can exist only during a few moments during a standby promotion. However there is a race condition: if pg_ctl promote is executed and creates the files during a promotion, the files can stay around even after the server is brought up to new master. Then, if new standby starts by using the backup taken from that master, the files can exist at the server startup and should be removed in order to avoid an unexpected promotion. Back-patch to 9.1 where promote signal file was introduced. Problem reported by Feike Steenbergen. Original patch by Michael Paquier, modified by me. Discussion: 20150528100705.4686.91426@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2015-09-09Add gin_fuzzy_search_limit to postgresql.conf.sample.Fujii Masao
This was forgotten in 8a3631f (commit that originally added the parameter) and 0ca9907 (commit that added the documentation later that year). Back-patch to all supported versions.
2015-09-07Change type of DOW/DOY to UNITSGreg Stark
2015-09-07Make GIN's cleanup pending list process interruptableTeodor Sigaev
Cleanup process could be called by ordinary insert/update and could take a lot of time. Add vacuum_delay_point() to make this process interruptable. Under vacuum this call will also throttle a vacuum process to decrease system load, called from insert/update it will not throttle, and that reduces a latency. Backpatch for all supported branches. Jeff Janes <jeff.janes@gmail.com>
2015-09-06Move DTK_ISODOW DTK_DOW and DTK_DOY to be type UNITS rather thanGreg Stark
RESERV. RESERV is meant for tokens like "now" and having them in that category throws errors like these when used as an input date: stark=# SELECT 'doy'::timestamptz; ERROR: unexpected dtype 33 while parsing timestamptz "doy" LINE 1: SELECT 'doy'::timestamptz; ^ stark=# SELECT 'dow'::timestamptz; ERROR: unexpected dtype 32 while parsing timestamptz "dow" LINE 1: SELECT 'dow'::timestamptz; ^ Found by LLVM's Libfuzzer
2015-09-05Fix misc typos.Heikki Linnakangas
Oskari Saarenmaa. Backpatch to stable branches where applicable.
2015-09-04Fix subtransaction cleanup after an outer-subtransaction portal fails.Tom Lane
Formerly, we treated only portals created in the current subtransaction as having failed during subtransaction abort. However, if the error occurred while running a portal created in an outer subtransaction (ie, a cursor declared before the last savepoint), that has to be considered broken too. To allow reliable detection of which ones those are, add a bookkeeping field to struct Portal that tracks the innermost subtransaction in which each portal has actually been executed. (Without this, we'd end up failing portals containing functions that had called the subtransaction, thereby breaking plpgsql exception blocks completely.) In addition, when we fail an outer-subtransaction Portal, transfer its resources into the subtransaction's resource owner, so that they're released early in cleanup of the subxact. This fixes a problem reported by Jim Nasby in which a function executed in an outer-subtransaction cursor could cause an Assert failure or crash by referencing a relation created within the inner subtransaction. The proximate cause of the Assert failure is that AtEOSubXact_RelationCache assumed it could blow away a relcache entry without first checking that the entry had zero refcount. That was a bad idea on its own terms, so add such a check there, and to the similar coding in AtEOXact_RelationCache. This provides an independent safety measure in case there are still ways to provoke the situation despite the Portal-level changes. This has been broken since subtransactions were invented, so back-patch to all supported branches. Tom Lane and Michael Paquier
2015-08-29Fix s_lock.h PPC assembly code to be compatible with native AIX assembler.Tom Lane
On recent AIX it's necessary to configure gcc to use the native assembler (because the GNU assembler hasn't been updated to handle AIX 6+). This caused PG builds to fail with assembler syntax errors, because we'd try to compile s_lock.h's gcc asm fragment for PPC, and that assembly code relied on GNU-style local labels. We can't substitute normal labels because it would fail in any file containing more than one inlined use of tas(). Fortunately, that code is stable enough, and the PPC ISA is simple enough, that it doesn't seem like too much of a maintenance burden to just hand-code the branch offsets, removing the need for any labels. Note that the AIX assembler only accepts "$" for the location counter pseudo-symbol. The usual GNU convention is "."; but it appears that all versions of gas for PPC also accept "$", so in theory this patch will not break any other PPC platforms. This has been reported by a few people, but Steve Underwood gets the credit for being the first to pursue the problem far enough to understand why it was failing. Thanks also to Noah Misch for additional testing.
2015-08-27Add a small cache of locks owned by a resource owner in ResourceOwner.Tom Lane
Back-patch 9.3-era commit eeb6f37d89fc60c6449ca12ef9e91491069369cb, to improve the older branches' ability to cope with pg_dump dumping a large number of tables. I back-patched into 9.2 and 9.1, but not 9.0 as it would have required a significant amount of refactoring, thus negating the argument that this is by-now-well-tested code. Jeff Janes, reviewed by Amit Kapila and Heikki Linnakangas.
2015-08-21Avoid O(N^2) behavior when enlarging SPI tuple table in spi_printtup().Tom Lane
For no obvious reason, spi_printtup() was coded to enlarge the tuple pointer table by just 256 slots at a time, rather than doubling the size at each reallocation, as is our usual habit. For very large SPI results, this makes for O(N^2) time spent in repalloc(), which of course soon comes to dominate the runtime. Use the standard doubling approach instead. This is a longstanding performance bug, so back-patch to all active branches. Neil Conway
2015-08-21Fix plpython crash when returning string representation of a RECORD result.Tom Lane
PLyString_ToComposite() blithely overwrote proc->result.out.d, even though for a composite result type the other union variant proc->result.out.r is the one that should be valid. This could result in a crash if out.r had in fact been filled in (proc->result.is_rowtype == 1) and then somebody later attempted to use that data; as per bug #13579 from Paweł Michalak. Just to add insult to injury, it didn't work for RECORD results anyway, because record_in() would refuse the case. Fix by doing the I/O function lookup in a local PLyTypeInfo variable, as we were doing already in PLyObject_ToComposite(). This is not a great technique because any fn_extra data allocated by the input function will be leaked permanently (thanks to using TopMemoryContext as fn_mcxt). But that's a pre-existing issue that is much less serious than a crash, so leave it to be fixed separately. This bug would be a potential security issue, except that plpython is only available to superusers and the crash requires coding the function in a way that didn't work before today's patches. Add regression test cases covering all the supported methods of converting composite results. Back-patch to 9.1 where the faulty coding was introduced.
2015-08-21Allow record_in() and record_recv() to work for transient record types.Tom Lane
If we have the typmod that identifies a registered record type, there's no reason that record_in() should refuse to perform input conversion for it. Now, in direct SQL usage, record_in() will always be passed typmod = -1 with type OID RECORDOID, because no typmodin exists for type RECORD, so the case can't arise. However, some InputFunctionCall users such as PLs may be able to supply the right typmod, so we should allow this to support them. Note: the previous coding and comment here predate commit 59c016aa9f490b53. There has been no case since 8.1 in which the passed type OID wouldn't be valid; and if it weren't, this error message wouldn't be apropos anyway. Better to let lookup_rowtype_tupdesc complain about it. Back-patch to 9.1, as this is necessary for my upcoming plpython fix. I'm committing it separately just to make it a bit more visible in the commit history.
2015-08-18Fix a few bogus statement type names in plpgsql error messages.Tom Lane
plpgsql's error location context messages ("PL/pgSQL function fn-name line line-no at stmt-type") would misreport a CONTINUE statement as being an EXIT, and misreport a MOVE statement as being a FETCH. These are clear bugs that have been there a long time, so back-patch to all supported branches. In addition, in 9.5 and HEAD, change the description of EXECUTE from "EXECUTE statement" to just plain EXECUTE; there seems no good reason why this statement type should be described differently from others that have a well-defined head keyword. And distinguish GET STACKED DIAGNOSTICS from plain GET DIAGNOSTICS. These are a bit more of a judgment call, and also affect existing regression-test outputs, so I did not back-patch into stable branches. Pavel Stehule and Tom Lane
2015-08-15Don't use 'bool' as a struct member name in help_config.c.Andres Freund
Doing so doesn't work if bool is a macro rather than a typedef. Although c.h spends some effort to support configurations where bool is a preexisting macro, help_config.c has existed this way since 2003 (b700a6), and there have not been any reports of problems. Backpatch anyway since this is as riskless as it gets. Discussion: 20150812084351.GD8470@awork2.anarazel.de Backpatch: 9.0-master
2015-08-13Improve regression test case to avoid depending on system catalog stats.Tom Lane
In commit 95f4e59c32866716 I added a regression test case that examined the plan of a query on system catalogs. That isn't a terribly great idea because the catalogs tend to change from version to version, or even within a version if someone makes an unrelated regression-test change that populates the catalogs a bit differently. Usually I try to make planner test cases rely on test tables that have not changed since Berkeley days, but I got sloppy in this case because the submitted crasher example queried the catalogs and I didn't spend enough time on rewriting it. But it was a problem waiting to happen, as I was rudely reminded when I tried to port that patch into Salesforce's Postgres variant :-(. So spend a little more effort and rewrite the query to not use any system catalogs. I verified that this version still provokes the Assert if 95f4e59c32866716's code fix is reverted. I also removed the EXPLAIN output from the test, as it turns out that the assertion occurs while considering a plan that isn't the one ultimately selected anyway; so there's no value in risking any cross-platform variation in that printout. Back-patch to 9.2, like the previous patch.
2015-08-13Fix declaration of isarray variable.Michael Meskes
Found and fixed by Andres Freund.
2015-08-12Undo mistaken tightening in join_is_legal().Tom Lane
One of the changes I made in commit 8703059c6b55c427 turns out not to have been such a good idea: we still need the exception in join_is_legal() that allows a join if both inputs already overlap the RHS of the special join we're checking. Otherwise we can miss valid plans, and might indeed fail to find a plan at all, as in recent report from Andreas Seltenreich. That code was added way back in commit c17117649b9ae23d, but I failed to include a regression test case then; my bad. Put it back with a better explanation, and a test this time. The logic does end up a bit different than before though: I now believe it's appropriate to make this check first, thereby allowing such a case whether or not we'd consider the previous SJ(s) to commute with this one. (Presumably, we already decided they did; but it was confusing to have this consideration in the middle of the code that was handling the other case.) Back-patch to all active branches, like the previous patch.
2015-08-12This routine was calling ecpg_alloc to allocate to memory but did notMichael Meskes
actually check the returned pointer allocated, potentially NULL which could be the result of a malloc call. Issue noted by Coverity, fixed by Michael Paquier <michael@otacoo.com>
2015-08-12Fix some possible low-memory failures in regexp compilation.Tom Lane
newnfa() failed to set the regex error state when malloc() fails. Several places in regcomp.c failed to check for an error after calling subre(). Each of these mistakes could lead to null-pointer-dereference crashes in memory-starved backends. Report and patch by Andreas Seltenreich. Back-patch to all branches.
2015-08-10Fix privilege dumping from servers too old to have that type of privilege.Tom Lane
pg_dump produced fairly silly GRANT/REVOKE commands when dumping types from pre-9.2 servers, and when dumping functions or procedural languages from pre-7.3 servers. Those server versions lack the typacl, proacl, and/or lanacl columns respectively, and pg_dump substituted default values that were in fact incorrect. We ended up revoking all the owner's own privileges for the object while granting all privileges to PUBLIC. Of course the owner would then have those privileges again via PUBLIC, so long as she did not try to revoke PUBLIC's privileges; which may explain the lack of field reports. Nonetheless this is pretty silly behavior. The stakes were raised by my recent patch to make pg_dump dump shell types, because 9.2 and up pg_dump would proceed to emit bogus GRANT/REVOKE commands for a shell type if dumping from a pre-9.2 server; and the server will not accept GRANT/REVOKE commands for a shell type. (Perhaps it should, but that's a topic for another day.) So the resulting dump script wouldn't load without errors. The right thing to do is to act as though these objects have default privileges (null ACL entries), which causes pg_dump to print no GRANT/REVOKE commands at all for them. That fixes the silly results and also dodges the problem with shell types. In passing, modify getProcLangs() to be less creatively different about how to handle missing columns when dumping from older server versions. Every other data-acquisition function in pg_dump does that by substituting appropriate default values in the version-specific SQL commands, and I see no reason why this one should march to its own drummer. Its use of "SELECT *" was likewise not conformant with anyplace else, not to mention it's not considered good SQL style for production queries. Back-patch to all supported versions. Although 9.0 and 9.1 pg_dump don't have the issue with typacl, they are more likely than newer versions to be used to dump from ancient servers, so we ought to fix the proacl/lanacl issues all the way back.
2015-08-10Accept alternate spellings of __sparcv7 and __sparcv8.Tom Lane
Apparently some versions of gcc prefer __sparc_v7__ and __sparc_v8__. Per report from Waldemar Brodkorb.
2015-08-10Further mucking with PlaceHolderVar-related restrictions on join order.Tom Lane
Commit 85e5e222b1dd02f135a8c3bf387d0d6d88e669bd turns out not to have taken care of all cases of the partially-evaluatable-PlaceHolderVar problem found by Andreas Seltenreich's fuzz testing. I had set it up to check for risky PHVs only in the event that we were making a star-schema-based exception to the param_source_rels join ordering heuristic. However, it turns out that the problem can occur even in joins that satisfy the param_source_rels heuristic, in which case allow_star_schema_join() isn't consulted. Refactor so that we check for risky PHVs whenever the proposed join has any remaining parameterization. Back-patch to 9.2, like the previous patch (except for the regression test case, which only works back to 9.3 because it uses LATERAL). Note that this discovery implies that problems of this sort could've occurred in 9.2 and up even before the star-schema patch; though I've not tried to prove that experimentally.
2015-08-06Further fixes for degenerate outer join clauses.Tom Lane
Further testing revealed that commit f69b4b9495269cc4 was still a few bricks shy of a load: minor tweaking of the previous test cases resulted in the same wrong-outer-join-order problem coming back. After study I concluded that my previous changes in make_outerjoininfo() were just accidentally masking the problem, and should be reverted in favor of forcing syntactic join order whenever an upper outer join's predicate doesn't mention a lower outer join's LHS. This still allows the chained-outer-joins style that is the normally optimizable case. I also tightened things up some more in join_is_legal(). It seems to me on review that what's really happening in the exception case where we ignore a mismatched special join is that we're allowing the proposed join to associate into the RHS of the outer join we're comparing it to. As such, we should *always* insist that the proposed join be a left join, which eliminates a bunch of rather dubious argumentation. The case where we weren't enforcing that was the one that was already known buggy anyway (it had a violatable Assert before the aforesaid commit) so it hardly deserves a lot of deference. Back-patch to all active branches, like the previous patch. The added regression test case failed in all branches back to 9.1, and I think it's only an unrelated change in costing calculations that kept 9.0 from choosing a broken plan.