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2023-07-05Rename EVT cache hash to make context name uniqueDaniel Gustafsson
BuildEventTriggerCache sets up a context "EventTriggerCache" which house a hash named "Event Trigger Cache", which in turn creates a context with the table name. This generated log output for memory context dumps like below: LOG: level: 2; EventTriggerCache: 8192 total in 1 blocks; 7928 free (4 chunks); 264 used LOG: level: 3; Event Trigger Cache: 8192 total in 1 blocks; 2616 free (0 chunks); 5576 used This renames the hash to ensure that the hash context has a unique name for easier log reading and debugging. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5EDC969E-CAE3-4CBD-965E-3B8A1294CFA4@yesql.se
2023-07-05pgstat: fix subscription stats entry leak.Masahiko Sawada
Commit 7b64e4b3 taught DropSubscription() to drop stats entry of subscription that is not associated with a replication slot for apply worker at DROP SUBSCRIPTION but missed covering the case where the subscription is not associated with replication slots for both apply worker and tablesync worker. Also add a test to verify that the stats for slot-less subscription is removed at DROP SUBSCRIPTION time. Backpatch down to 15. Author: Masahiko Sawada Reviewed-by: Nathan Bossart, Hayato Kuroda, Melih Mutlu, Amit Kapila Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoB71zkP7uPT7JDPsZcvp0749ExEQnOJxeNKPDFisHar+w@mail.gmail.com Backpatch-through: 15
2023-07-05Clean up command argument assemblyPeter Eisentraut
Several commands internally assemble command lines to call other commands. This includes initdb, pg_dumpall, and pg_regress. (Also pg_ctl, but that is different enough that I didn't consider it here.) This has all evolved a bit organically, with fixed-size buffers, and various optional command-line arguments being injected with confusing-looking code, and the spacing between options handled in inconsistent ways. Clean all this up a bit to look clearer and be more easily extensible with new arguments and options. We start each command with printfPQExpBuffer(), and then append arguments as necessary with appendPQExpBuffer(). Also standardize on using initPQExpBuffer() over createPQExpBuffer() where possible. pg_regress uses StringInfo instead of PQExpBuffer, but many of the same ideas apply. Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi> Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/16d0beac-a141-e5d3-60e9-323da75f49bf@eisentraut.org
2023-07-05Generate automatically code and documentation related to wait eventsMichael Paquier
The documentation and the code is generated automatically from a new file called wait_event_names.txt, formatted in sections dedicated to each wait event class (Timeout, Lock, IO, etc.) with three tab-separated fields: - C symbol in enums - Format in the system views - Description in the docs Using this approach has several advantages, as we have proved to be rather bad in maintaining this area of the tree across the years: - The order of each item in the documentation and the code, which should be alphabetical, has become incorrect multiple times, and the script generating the code and documentation has a few rules to enforce that, making the maintenance a no-brainer. - Some wait events were added to the code, but not documented, so this cannot be missed now. - The order of the tables for each wait event class is enforced in the documentation (the input .txt file does so as well for clarity, though this is not mandatory). - Less code, shaving 1.2k lines from the tree, with 1/3 of the savings coming from the code, the rest from the documentation. The wait event types "Lock" and "LWLock" still have their own code path for their code, hence only the documentation is created for them. These classes are listed with a special marker called WAIT_EVENT_DOCONLY in the input file. Adding a new wait event now requires only an update of wait_event_names.txt, with "Lock" and "LWLock" treated as exceptions. This commit has been tested with configure/Makefile, the CI and VPATH build. clean, distclean and maintainer-clean were working fine. Author: Bertrand Drouvot, Michael Paquier Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/77a86b3a-c4a8-5f5d-69b9-d70bbf2e9b98@gmail.com
2023-07-04Fix assertion failure in snapshot buildingDaniel Gustafsson
Clear any potential stale next_phase_at value from the snapshot builder which otherwise may trip an assertion check ensuring that there is no next_phase_at value. This can be reproduced by running 80 concurrent sessions like the below where $c is a loop counter (assumes there has been 1..$c databases created) : echo " CREATE TABLE replication_example(id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY, somedata int, text varchar(120)); SELECT 'init' FROM pg_create_logical_replication_slot('regression_slot_$c', 'test_decoding'); SELECT data FROM pg_logical_slot_get_changes('regression_slot_$c', NULL, NULL, 'include-xids', '0', 'skip-empty-xacts', '1'); " | psql -d regress_$c >>psql.log & Backpatch down to v16. Bug: #17695 Author: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Alexander Lakhin <exclusion@gmail.com> Reported-by: bowenshi <zxwsbg@qq.com> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17695-6be9277c9295985f@postgresql.org Backpatch-through: v16
2023-07-04Ensure that creation of an empty relfile is fsync'd at checkpoint.Heikki Linnakangas
If you create a table and don't insert any data into it, the relation file is never fsync'd. You don't lose data, because an empty table doesn't have any data to begin with, but if you crash and lose the file, subsequent operations on the table will fail with "could not open file" error. To fix, register an fsync request in mdcreate(), like we do for mdwrite(). Per discussion, we probably should also fsync the containing directory after creating a new file. But that's a separate and much wider issue. Backpatch to all supported versions. Reviewed-by: Andres Freund, Thomas Munro Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/d47d8122-415e-425c-d0a2-e0160829702d%40iki.fi
2023-07-04Remove incidental md5() function uses from several testsPeter Eisentraut
This removes md5() function calls from these test suites: - bloom - test_decoding - isolation - recovery - subscription This covers all remaining test suites where md5() calls were just used to generate some random data and can be replaced by appropriately adapted sha256() calls. This will eventually allow these tests to pass in OpenSSL FIPS mode (which does not allow MD5 use). See also 208bf364a9. Unlike for the main regression tests, I didn't write a fipshash() wrapper here, because that would have been too repetitive and wouldn't really save much here. In some cases it was easier to remove one layer of indirection by changing column types from text to bytea. Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se> Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/f9b480b5-e473-d2d1-223a-4b9db30a229a@eisentraut.org
2023-07-04Allow Incremental Sorts on GiST and SP-GiST indexesDavid Rowley
Previously an "amcanorderbyop" index would only be used when the index could provide sorted results which satisfied all query_pathkeys. Here we relax this so that we also allow these indexes to be considered by the planner when they only provide partially sorted results. This allows the planner to later consider making use of an Incremental Sort to satisfy the remaining pathkeys. This change is particularly useful for KNN-type queries which contain a LIMIT clause and an additional ORDER BY clause for a non-indexed column. Author: Miroslav Bendik Reviewed-by: Richard Guo, David Rowley Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPoEpV0QYDtzjwamwWUBqyWpaCVbJV2d6qOD7Uy09bWn47PJtw%40mail.gmail.com
2023-07-04libpq: Add support for Close on portals and statementsMichael Paquier
The following routines are added to libpq: PGresult *PQclosePrepared(PGconn *conn, const char *stmt); PGresult *PQclosePortal(PGconn *conn, const char *portal); int PQsendClosePrepared(PGconn *conn, const char *stmt); int PQsendClosePortal(PGconn *conn, const char *portal); The "send" routines are non-blocking versions of the two others. Close messages are part of the protocol but they did not have a libpq implementation. And, having these routines is for instance useful with connection poolers as these can detect more easily Close messages than DEALLOCATE queries. The implementation takes advantage of what the Describe routines rely on for portals and statements. Some regression tests are added in libpq_pipeline, for the four new routines, by closing portals and statements created already by the tests. Author: Jelte Fennema Reviewed-by: Jian He, Michael Paquier Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAGECzQTb4xFAopAVokudB+L62Kt44mNAL4Z9zZ7UTrs1TRFvWA@mail.gmail.com
2023-07-04Re-bin segment when memory pages are freed.Thomas Munro
It's OK to be lazy about re-binning memory segments when allocating, because that can only leave segments in a bin that's too high. We'll search higher bins if necessary while allocating next time, and also eventually re-bin, so no memory can become unreachable that way. However, when freeing memory, the largest contiguous range of free pages might go up, so we should re-bin eagerly to make sure we don't leave the segment in a bin that is too low for get_best_segment() to find. The re-binning code is moved into a function of its own, so it can be called whenever free pages are returned to the segment's free page map. Back-patch to all supported releases. Author: Dongming Liu <ldming101@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> (earlier version) Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@gmail.com> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAL1p7e8LzB2LSeAXo2pXCW4%2BRya9s0sJ3G_ReKOU%3DAjSUWjHWQ%40mail.gmail.com
2023-07-04Remove trailing zero words from BitmapsetsDavid Rowley
Prior to this, Bitmapsets could contain trailing words which had no members set. Many places in bitmapset.c had to loop over trailing words to check for empty words. If we ensure we always remove these trailing zero words then we can perform various optimizations such as fast pathing bms_is_subset to return false when 'a' has more words than 'b'. A similar optimization is possible in bms_equal. Both of these together can yield quite significant performance increases in the query planner when querying a partitioned table with around 100 or more partitions. While we're at it, since the minimum number of words a Bitmapset can contain is 1, we can make use of do/while loops instead of for loops when looping over all words in a set. This means checking the loop condition 1 less time, which for single-word sets cuts the loop condition checks in half. Author: David Rowley Reviewed-by: Yuya Watari Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvr5O41MuUjw0DQKqmAnv7QqvmLqXReEd5o4nXTzWp8-+w@mail.gmail.com
2023-07-03Increase size of bgw_library_name.Nathan Bossart
This commit increases the size of the bgw_library_name member of the BackgroundWorker struct from BGW_MAXLEN (96) bytes to MAXPGPATH (default of 1024) bytes so that it can store longer file names (e.g., absolute paths). Author: Yurii Rashkovskii Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson, Aleksander Alekseev Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BRLCQyjFV5Y8tG5QgUb6gjteL4S3p%2B1gcyqWTqigyM93WZ9Pg%40mail.gmail.com
2023-07-04Fix race in SSI interaction with gin fast path.Thomas Munro
The ginfast.c code previously checked for conflicts in before locking the relevant buffer, leaving a window where a RW conflict could be missed. Re-order. There was also a place where buffer ID and block number were confused while trying to predicate-lock a page, noted by visual inspection. Back-patch to all supported releases. Fixes one more problem discovered with the reproducer from bug #17949, in this case when Dmitry tried other index types. Reported-by: Artem Anisimov <artem.anisimov.255@gmail.com> Reported-by: Dmitry Dolgov <9erthalion6@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17949-a0f17035294a55e2%40postgresql.org
2023-07-04Fix race in SSI interaction with bitmap heap scan.Thomas Munro
When performing a bitmap heap scan, we don't want to miss concurrent writes that occurred after we observed the heap's rs_nblocks, but before we took predicate locks on index pages. Therefore, we can't skip fetching any heap tuples that are referenced by the index, because we need to test them all with CheckForSerializableConflictOut(). The old optimization that would ignore any references to blocks >= rs_nblocks gets in the way of that requirement, because it means that concurrent writes in that window are ignored. Removing that optimization shouldn't affect correctness at any isolation level, because any new tuples shouldn't be visible to an MVCC snapshot. There also shouldn't be any error-causing references to heap blocks past the end, because we should have held at least an AccessShareLock on the table before the index scan. It can't get smaller while our transaction is running. For now, though, we'll keep the optimization at lower levels to avoid making unnecessary changes in a bug fix. Back-patch to all supported releases. In release 11, the code is in a different place but not fundamentally different. Fixes one aspect of bug #17949. Reported-by: Artem Anisimov <artem.anisimov.255@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Dmitry Dolgov <9erthalion6@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17949-a0f17035294a55e2%40postgresql.org
2023-07-04Fix race in SSI interaction with empty btrees.Thomas Munro
When predicate-locking btrees, we have a special case for completely empty btrees, since there is no page to lock. This was racy, because, without buffer lock held, a matching key could be inserted between the _bt_search() and the PredicateLockRelation() calls. Fix, by rechecking _bt_search() after taking the relation-level SIREAD lock, if using SERIALIZABLE isolation and an empty btree is discovered. Back-patch to all supported releases. Fixes one aspect of bug #17949. Reported-by: Artem Anisimov <artem.anisimov.255@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Dmitry Dolgov <9erthalion6@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17949-a0f17035294a55e2%40postgresql.org
2023-07-03Don't truncate database and user names in startup packets.Nathan Bossart
Unlike commands such as CREATE DATABASE, ProcessStartupPacket() does not perform multibyte-aware truncation of overlength names. This means that connection attempts might fail even if the user provides the same overlength names that were used in CREATE DATABASE, CREATE ROLE, etc. Ideally, we'd do the same multibyte- aware truncation in both code paths, but it doesn't seem worth the added complexity of trying to discover the encoding of the names. Instead, let's simply skip truncating the names in the startup packet and let the user/database lookup fail later on. With this change, users must provide the exact names stored in the catalogs, even if the names were truncated. This reverts commit d18c1d1f51. Author: Bertrand Drouvot Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi, Tom Lane Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/07436793-1426-29b2-f924-db7422a05fb7%40gmail.com
2023-07-03Consider fillfactor when estimating relation sizeTomas Vondra
When table_block_relation_estimate_size() estimated the number of tuples in a relation without statistics (e.g. right after load), it did not consider fillfactor when calculating density. With non-default fillfactor values, this may result in significant overestimate of the number of tuples - up to 10x with the minimum 10% fillfactor. This may have unexpected consequences, e.g. when creating hash indexes. This considers the current fillfactor value in the "no statistics" code path. If the fillfactor changes after loading data into the table, the estimate may be off. But that seems much less likely than changing the fillfactor before the data load. Reviewed-by: Corey Huinker, Peter Eisentraut Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/cf154ef9-6bac-d268-b735-67a3443debba@enterprisedb.com
2023-07-03Improve pg_basebackup long file name test Windows robustnessAndrew Dunstan
Creation of a file with a very long name can create problems on Windows due to its file path limits. Work around that by creating the file via a symlink with a shorter name. Error displayed by buildfarm animal fairywren.o Backpatch to all live branches
2023-07-03Fix code indentation violationsTomas Vondra
Commits ce5aaea8cd, 2b8b2852bb and 28d03feac3 violated the expected code indentation rules, upsetting the new buildfarm member "koel." Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ZKIU4mhWpgJOM0W0%40paquier.xyz
2023-07-03A minor simplification for List manipulationPeter Eisentraut
Fix one place that was using lfirst(list_head(list)) by using linitial(list) instead. They are equivalent but the latter is simpler. We did the same in 9d299a49. Author: Richard Guo <guofenglinux@gmail.com> Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CAMbWs49dJnpezDQDDxCPKq7+=_3NyqLqGqnhqCjd+dYe4MS15w@mail.gmail.com
2023-07-03Update PG_CACHE_LINE_SIZE description.Heikki Linnakangas
PG_CACHE_LINE_SIZE was originally only used in xlog.c, but this hasn't been true for a very long time and is now wildly used, so modify its description to not mention any explicit source code file. Author: Julien Rouhaud Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20230701074936.p3qcssl4t7murt2q@jrouhaud
2023-07-03Take pg_attribute out of VacAttrStatsPeter Eisentraut
The VacAttrStats structure contained the whole Form_pg_attribute for a column, but it actually only needs attstattarget from there. So remove the Form_pg_attribute field and make a separate field for attstattarget. This simplifies some code for extended statistics that doesn't deal with a column but an expression, which had to fake up pg_attribute rows to satisfy internal APIs. Also, we can remove some comments that essentially said "don't look at pg_attribute directly". Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@enterprisedb.com> Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/d6069765-5971-04d3-c10d-e4f7b2e9c459%40eisentraut.org
2023-07-03Add macro for maximum statistics targetPeter Eisentraut
The number of places where 10000 was hardcoded had grown a bit beyond the comfort level. Introduce a macro MAX_STATISTICS_TARGET instead. Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@enterprisedb.com> Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/d6069765-5971-04d3-c10d-e4f7b2e9c459%40eisentraut.org
2023-07-03Change type of pg_statistic_ext.stxstattargetPeter Eisentraut
Change from int32 to int16, to match attstattarget (changed in 90189eefc1). Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@enterprisedb.com> Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/d6069765-5971-04d3-c10d-e4f7b2e9c459%40eisentraut.org
2023-07-03Remove support for OpenSSL 1.0.1Michael Paquier
Here are some notes about this change: - As X509_get_signature_nid() should always exist (OpenSSL and LibreSSL), hence HAVE_X509_GET_SIGNATURE_NID is now gone. - OPENSSL_API_COMPAT is bumped to 0x10002000L. - One comment related to 1.0.1e introduced by 74242c2 is removed. Upstream OpenSSL still provides long-term support for 1.0.2 in a closed fashion, so removing it is out of scope for a few years, at least. Reviewed-by: Jacob Champion, Daniel Gustafsson Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ZG3JNursG69dz1lr@paquier.xyz
2023-07-03Refactor some code related to wait events "BufferPin" and "Extension"Michael Paquier
The following changes are done: - Addition of WaitEventBufferPin and WaitEventExtension, that hold a list of wait events related to each category. - Addition of two functions that encapsulate the list of wait events for each category. - Rename BUFFER_PIN to BUFFERPIN (only this wait event class used an underscore, requiring a specific rule in the automation script). These changes make a bit easier the automatic generation of all the code and documentation related to wait events, as all the wait event categories are now controlled by consistent structures and functions. Author: Bertrand Drouvot Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c6f35117-4b20-4c78-1df5-d3056010dcf5@gmail.com Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/77a86b3a-c4a8-5f5d-69b9-d70bbf2e9b98@gmail.com
2023-07-03Make PG_TEST_NOCLEAN work for temporary directories in TAP testsMichael Paquier
When set, this environment variable was only effective for data directories but not for all the other temporary files created by PostgreSQL::Test::Utils. Keeping the temporary files after a successful run can be useful for debugging purposes. The documentation is updated to reflect the new behavior, with contents available in doc/ since v16 and in src/test/perl/README since v15. Author: Jacob Champion Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAWbhmgHtDH1SGZ+Fw05CsXtE0mzTmjbuUxLB9mY9iPKgM6cUw@mail.gmail.com Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/YyPd9unV14SX2bLF@paquier.xyz Backpatch-through: 11
2023-07-03Remove redundant PARTITION BY columns from WindowClausesDavid Rowley
Here we adjust the query planner to have it remove items from a window clause's PARTITION BY clause in cases where the pathkey for a column in the PARTITION BY clause is redundant. Doing this allows the optimization added in 9d9c02ccd to stop window aggregation early rather than going into "pass-through" mode to find tuples belonging to the next partition. Also, when we manage to remove all PARTITION BY columns, we now no longer needlessly check that the current tuple belongs to the same partition as the last tuple in nodeWindowAgg.c. If the pathkey was redundant then all tuples must contain the same value for the given redundant column, so there's no point in checking that during execution. Author: David Rowley Reviewed-by: Richard Guo Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvo2ji+hdxrxfXtRtsfSVw3to2o1nCO20qimw0dUGK8hcQ@mail.gmail.com
2023-07-03Silence "missing contrecord" error.Thomas Munro
Commit dd38ff28ad added a new error message "missing contrecord" when we fail to reassemble a record. Unfortunately that caused noisy messages to be logged by pg_waldump at end of segment, and by walsender when asked to shut down on a segment boundary. Remove the new error message, so that this condition signals end-of- WAL without a message. It's arguably a reportable condition that should not be silenced while performing crash recovery, but fixing that without introducing noise in the other cases will require more research. Back-patch to 15. Reported-by: Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@enterprisedb.com> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/6a1df56e-4656-b3ce-4b7a-a9cb41df8189%40enterprisedb.com
2023-07-02Fix oversight in handling of modifiedCols since f24523672dTomas Vondra
Commit f24523672d fixed a memory leak by moving the modifiedCols bitmap into the per-row memory context. In the case of AFTER UPDATE triggers, the bitmap is however referenced from an event kept until the end of the query, resulting in a use-after-free bug. Fixed by copying the bitmap into the AfterTriggerEvents memory context, which is the one where we keep the trigger events. There's only one place that needs to do the copy, but the memory context may not exist yet. Doing that in a separate function seems more readable. Report by Alexander Pyhalov, fix by me. Backpatch to 13, where the bitmap was added to the event by commit 71d60e2aa0. Reported-by: Alexander Pyhalov Backpatch-through: 13 Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/acddb17c89b0d6cb940eaeda18c08bbe@postgrespro.ru
2023-07-02Fix memory leak in Incremental Sort rescansTomas Vondra
The Incremental Sort had a couple issues, resulting in leaking memory during rescans, possibly triggering OOM. The code had a couple of related flaws: 1. During rescans, the sort states were reset but then also set to NULL (despite the comment saying otherwise). ExecIncrementalSort then sees NULL and initializes a new sort state, leaking the memory used by the old one. 2. Initializing the sort state also automatically rebuilt the info about presorted keys, leaking the already initialized info. presorted_keys was also unnecessarily reset to NULL. Patch by James Coleman, based on patches by Laurenz Albe and Tom Lane. Backpatch to 13, where Incremental Sort was introduced. Author: James Coleman, Laurenz Albe, Tom Lane Reported-by: Laurenz Albe, Zu-Ming Jiang Backpatch-through: 13 Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/b2bd02dff61af15e3526293e2771f874cf2a3be7.camel%40cybertec.at Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/db03c582-086d-e7cd-d4a1-3bc722f81765%40inf.ethz.ch
2023-07-02Improve BRIN minmax-multi opclass test coverageTomas Vondra
Per the code coverage report, the existing regression tests did not exercice some a couple important BRIN minmax-multi code paths. - The tests focused on testing planning with a range of scan key strategies, but not the execution. Fixed by adding queries that actually test query execution for both equality and inequality. - All tests created indexes after inserting data, but this only exercises the CREATE INDEX strategy that sees all values at once, not incremental summary updates. The new tests flip the order and create the index before adding data. - The assert check(s) validating correctness of expanded ranges were present only in the "union" code path, which is not covered by regression tests at all (as it requires concurrency etc.). Fixed by adding the asserts to a couple more places. Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/57020b2e-d9c9-9bc7-4892-b36d9bb07563%40enterprisedb.com
2023-07-02Introduce bloom_filter_size for BRIN bloom opclassTomas Vondra
Move the calculation of Bloom filter parameters (for BRIN indexes) into a separate function to make reuse easier. At the moment we only call it from one place, but that may change and it's easier to read anyway. Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0e1f3350-c9cf-ab62-43a5-5dae314de89c%40enterprisedb.com
2023-07-02Minor cleanups in the BRIN codeTomas Vondra
BRIN bloom and minmax-multi opclasses were somewhat inconsistent when dealing with bool variables, assigning to them Datum values etc. While not a bug, it makes the code harder to understand, so fix that. While at it, update an incorrect comment copied to bloom opclass from minmax, talking about strategies not supported by bloom. Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0e1f3350-c9cf-ab62-43a5-5dae314de89c%40enterprisedb.com
2023-07-02Trust signalfd on illumos, again.Thomas Munro
Commit 3ab4fc5d avoided choosing signalfd by default on illumos, because it triggered kernel panics. That was fixed, so we can remove a kludge from our code. Users/packagers can still override the default choice at compile time if desired, and we'll leave the back-branches unchanged so they keep choosing self-pipe by default, but we'll default to signalfd (like we do for Linux) in 17. Fixed kernels should be everywhere by the time 17 ships. The illumos issues were: * https://www.illumos.org/issues/13700 * https://www.illumos.org/issues/14892 Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+hUKG+NK-K_G_i1H3OpDTwYPEsiwQi_jw58PGcW2H+-N2eVCA@mail.gmail.com
2023-06-30Remove redundant check for fast_forward.Heikki Linnakangas
We already checked for it earlier in the function. Reviewed-by: Andres Freund Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/1ba2899e-77f8-7866-79e5-f3b7d1251a3e@iki.fi
2023-06-30Improve comment on why we need ctid->(cmin,cmax) mapping.Heikki Linnakangas
Combocids are only part of the problem. Explain the problem in more detail. Reviewed-by: Andres Freund Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/1ba2899e-77f8-7866-79e5-f3b7d1251a3e@iki.fi
2023-06-30Introduce long options in pg_archivecleanupMichael Paquier
This patch is a preliminary refactoring for an upcoming patch aimed at adding new options to this tool, and using long options for these is more user-friendly. The existing short options gain long flavors, as of: * -d/--debug * -n/--dry-run * -x/--strip-extension Author: Atsushi Torikoshi Reviewed-by: Fujii Masao, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Michael Paquier Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/d660ef741ce3d82f3b4283f1cafd576c@oss.nttdata.com
2023-06-30Fix marking of indisvalid for partitioned indexes at creationMichael Paquier
The logic that introduced partitioned indexes missed a few things when invalidating a partitioned index when these are created, still the code is written to handle recursions: 1) If created from scratch because a mapping index could not be found, the new index created could be itself invalid, if for example it was a partitioned index with one of its leaves invalid. 2) A CCI was missing when indisvalid is set for a parent index, leading to inconsistent trees when recursing across more than one level for a partitioned index creation if an invalidation of the parent was required. This could lead to the creation of a partition index tree where some of the partitioned indexes are marked as invalid, but some of the parents are marked valid, which is not something that should happen (as validatePartitionedIndex() defines, indisvalid is switched to true for a partitioned index iff all its partitions are themselves valid). This patch makes sure that indisvalid is set to false on a partitioned index if at least one of its partition is invalid. The flag is set to true if *all* its partitions are valid. The regression test added in this commit abuses of a failed concurrent index creation, marked as invalid, that maps with an index created on its partitioned table afterwards. Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin Reviewed-by: Alexander Lakhin Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/14987634-43c0-0cb3-e075-94d423607e08@gmail.com Backpatch-through: 11
2023-06-30Add tab completion for CREATE SCHEMA in psqlMichael Paquier
The following patterns are added for CREATE SCHEMA: - AUTHORIZATION, without a schema name or after a schema name. - Possible list of owner roles after AUTHORIZATION. - CREATE and GRANT within the supported set of commands. - Correct object types supported in an embedded CREATE SCHEMA command. While on it, this commit adjusts the completion done after CREATE UNLOGGED: - Addition of SEQUENCE. - Avoid suggesting MATERIALIZED VIEW in CREATE TABLE. Author: Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker Reviewed-by: Suraj Khamkar, Michael Paquier Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8735snihmz.fsf@wibble.ilmari.org
2023-06-30Use named captures in Catalog::ParseHeader()Michael Paquier
Using at least perl 5.14 is required since 4c15327, meaning that it is possible to use named captures and the %+ hash instead of having to count parenthesis groups manually. While on it, CATALOG is made more flexible in its handling of whitespaces for parameter lists (see the addition of \s* in this case). The generated postgres.bki remains exactly the same before and after this commit. Author: Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker Reviewed-by: John Naylor Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/87y1l3s7o9.fsf@wibble.ilmari.org
2023-06-29Stamp HEAD as 17devel.Tom Lane
Let the hacking begin ...
2023-06-30Fix pg_depend entry to AMs after ALTER TABLE .. SET ACCESS METHODMichael Paquier
ALTER TABLE .. SET ACCESS METHOD was not registering a dependency to the new access method with the relation altered in its rewrite phase, making possible the drop of an access method even if there are relations that depend on it. During the rewrite, a temporary relation is created to build the new relation files before swapping the new and old files, and, while the temporary relation was registering a correct dependency to the new AM, the old relation did not do that. A dependency on the access method is added when the relation files are swapped, which is the point where pg_class is updated. Materialized views and tables use the same code path, hence both were impacted. Backpatch down to 15, where this command has been introduced. Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin Reviewed-by: Nathan Bossart, Andres Freund Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18000-9145c25b1af475ca@postgresql.org Backpatch-through: 15
2023-06-29Defend against bogus parameterization of join input paths.Tom Lane
An outer join cannot be formed using an input path that is parameterized by a value that is supposed to be nulled by the outer join. This is obviously nonsensical, and it could lead to a bad plan being selected; although currently it seems that we'll hit various sanity-check assertions first. I think that such cases were formerly prevented by the delay_upper_joins mechanism, but now that that's gone we need an explicit check. (Perhaps we should avoid generating baserel paths that could lead to this situation in the first place; but it seems like having a defense at the join level would be a good idea anyway.) Richard Guo and Tom Lane, per report from Jaime Casanova Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJKUy5g2uZRrUDZJ8p-=giwcSHVUn0c9nmdxPSY0jF0Ov8VoEA@mail.gmail.com
2023-06-29Fix order of operations in ExecEvalFieldStoreDeForm().Tom Lane
If the given composite datum is toasted out-of-line, DatumGetHeapTupleHeader will perform database accesses to detoast it. That can invalidate the result of get_cached_rowtype, as documented (perhaps not plainly enough) in that function's API spec; which leads to strange errors or crashes when we try to use the TupleDesc to read the tuple. In short then, trying to update a field of a composite column could fail intermittently if the overall column value is wide enough to require toasting. We can fix the bug at no cost by just changing the order of operations, since we don't need the TupleDesc until after detoasting. (Other callers of get_cached_rowtype appear to get this right already, so there's only one bug.) Note that the added regression test case reveals this bug reliably only with debug_discard_caches/CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS. Per bug #17994 from Alexander Lakhin. Sadly, this patch does not fix the missing-values issue revealed in the bug discussion; we'll need some more work to cover that. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17994-5c7100b51b4790e9@postgresql.org
2023-06-29meson: Make some Meson style more consistent with surrounding codePeter Eisentraut
Author: Tristan Partin <tristan@neon.tech> Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CSPIJVUDZFKX.3KHMOAVGF94RV%40c3po
2023-06-29Remove inappropriate raw_expression_tree_walker() codePeter Eisentraut
It was walking into the ColumnDef->compression field, which is not a node but a string. This code is currently not reachable (because the compression field is only set in situations that don't go through raw_expression_tree_walker()), but if it had been, this could have behaved erratically.
2023-06-29Error message wording improvementsPeter Eisentraut
2023-06-28Fix psql \?'s entries for \dp and \z.Nathan Bossart
d913928c9c added support for the "S" modifier to psql's \dp and \z meta-commands, but it missed updating the corresponding entries in \?'s output. Author: Noriyoshi Shinoda Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/DM4PR84MB17342A51B3A1556CFBC7A4B2EE25A%40DM4PR84MB1734.NAMPRD84.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM
2023-06-28Reword error messages for consistencyPeter Eisentraut