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2014-11-17Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2014j.Tom Lane
DST law changes in the Turks & Caicos Islands (America/Grand_Turk) and in Fiji. New zone Pacific/Bougainville for portions of Papua New Guinea. Historical changes for Korea and Vietnam.
2014-11-17Fix WAL-logging of B-tree "unlink halfdead page" operation.Heikki Linnakangas
There was some confusion on how to record the case that the operation unlinks the last non-leaf page in the branch being deleted. _bt_unlink_halfdead_page set the "topdead" field in the WAL record to the leaf page, but the redo routine assumed that it would be an invalid block number in that case. This commit fixes _bt_unlink_halfdead_page to do what the redo routine expected. This code is new in 9.4, so backpatch there.
2014-11-16Translation updatesPeter Eisentraut
2014-11-15Fix initdb --sync-only to also sync tablespaces.Andres Freund
630cd14426dc added initdb --sync-only, for use by pg_upgrade, by just exposing the existing fsync code. That's wrong, because initdb so far had absolutely no reason to deal with tablespaces. Fix --sync-only by additionally explicitly syncing each of the tablespaces. Backpatch to 9.3 where --sync-only was introduced. Abhijit Menon-Sen and Andres Freund
2014-11-15Sync unlogged relations to disk after they have been reset.Andres Freund
Unlogged relations are only reset when performing a unclean restart. That means they have to be synced to disk during clean shutdowns. During normal processing that's achieved by registering a buffer's file to be fsynced at the next checkpoint when flushed. But ResetUnloggedRelations() doesn't go through the buffer manager, so nothing will force reset relations to disk before the next shutdown checkpoint. So just make ResetUnloggedRelations() fsync the newly created main forks to disk. Discussion: 20140912112246.GA4984@alap3.anarazel.de Backpatch to 9.1 where unlogged tables were introduced. Abhijit Menon-Sen and Andres Freund
2014-11-15Ensure unlogged tables are reset even if crash recovery errors out.Andres Freund
Unlogged relations are reset at the end of crash recovery as they're only synced to disk during a proper shutdown. Unfortunately that and later steps can fail, e.g. due to running out of space. This reset was, up to now performed after marking the database as having finished crash recovery successfully. As out of space errors trigger a crash restart that could lead to the situation that not all unlogged relations are reset. Once that happend usage of unlogged relations could yield errors like "could not open file "...": No such file or directory". Luckily clusters that show the problem can be fixed by performing a immediate shutdown, and starting the database again. To fix, just call ResetUnloggedRelations(UNLOGGED_RELATION_INIT) earlier, before marking the database as having successfully recovered. Discussion: 20140912112246.GA4984@alap3.anarazel.de Backpatch to 9.1 where unlogged tables were introduced. Abhijit Menon-Sen and Andres Freund
2014-11-14Allow interrupting GetMultiXactIdMembersAlvaro Herrera
This function has a loop which can lead to uninterruptible process "stalls" (actually infinite loops) when some bugs are triggered. Avoid that unpleasant situation by adding a check for interrupts in a place that shouldn't degrade performance in the normal case. Backpatch to 9.3. Older branches have an identical loop here, but the aforementioned bugs are only a problem starting in 9.3 so there doesn't seem to be any point in backpatching any further.
2014-11-13Improve logical decoding log messagesPeter Eisentraut
suggestions from Robert Haas
2014-11-13Fix pg_dumpall to restore its ability to dump from ancient servers.Tom Lane
Fix breakage induced by commits d8d3d2a4f37f6df5d0118b7f5211978cca22091a and 463f2625a5fb183b6a8925ccde98bb3889f921d9: pg_dumpall has crashed when attempting to dump from pre-8.1 servers since then, due to faulty construction of the query used for dumping roles from older servers. The query was erroneous as of the earlier commit, but it wasn't exposed unless you tried to use --binary-upgrade, which you presumably wouldn't with a pre-8.1 server. However commit 463f2625a made it fail always. In HEAD, also fix additional breakage induced in the same query by commit 491c029dbc4206779cf659aa0ff986af7831d2ff, which evidently wasn't tested against pre-8.1 servers either. The bug is only latent in 9.1 because 463f2625a hadn't landed yet, but it seems best to back-patch all branches containing the faulty query. Gilles Darold
2014-11-13Fix and improve cache invalidation logic for logical decoding.Andres Freund
There are basically three situations in which logical decoding needs to perform cache invalidation. During/After replaying a transaction with catalog changes, when skipping a uninteresting transaction that performed catalog changes and when erroring out while replaying a transaction. Unfortunately these three cases were all done slightly differently - partially because 8de3e410fa, which greatly simplifies matters, got committed in the midst of the development of logical decoding. The actually problematic case was when logical decoding skipped transaction commits (and thus processed invalidations). When used via the SQL interface cache invalidation could access the catalog - bad, because we didn't set up enough state to allow that correctly. It'd not be hard to setup sufficient state, but the simpler solution is to always perform cache invalidation outside a valid transaction. Also make the different cache invalidation cases look as similar as possible, to ease code review. This fixes the assertion failure reported by Antonin Houska in 53EE02D9.7040702@gmail.com. The presented testcase has been expanded into a regression test. Backpatch to 9.4, where logical decoding was introduced.
2014-11-13Fix xmin/xmax horizon computation during logical decoding initialization.Andres Freund
When building the initial historic catalog snapshot there were scenarios where snapbuild.c would use incorrect xmin/xmax values when starting from a xl_running_xacts record. The values used were always a bit suspect, but happened to be correct in the easy to test cases. Notably the values used when the the initial snapshot was computed while no other transactions were running were correct. This is likely to be the cause of the occasional buildfarm failures on animals markhor and tick; but it's quite possible to reproduce problems without CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS. Backpatch to 9.4, where logical decoding was introduced.
2014-11-13Fix race condition between hot standby and restoring a full-page image.Heikki Linnakangas
There was a window in RestoreBackupBlock where a page would be zeroed out, but not yet locked. If a backend pinned and locked the page in that window, it saw the zeroed page instead of the old page or new page contents, which could lead to missing rows in a result set, or errors. To fix, replace RBM_ZERO with RBM_ZERO_AND_LOCK, which atomically pins, zeroes, and locks the page, if it's not in the buffer cache already. In stable branches, the old RBM_ZERO constant is renamed to RBM_DO_NOT_USE, to avoid breaking any 3rd party extensions that might use RBM_ZERO. More importantly, this avoids renumbering the other enum values, which would cause even bigger confusion in extensions that use ReadBufferExtended, but haven't been recompiled. Backpatch to all supported versions; this has been racy since hot standby was introduced.
2014-11-12Explicitly support the case that a plancache's raw_parse_tree is NULL.Tom Lane
This only happens if a client issues a Parse message with an empty query string, which is a bit odd; but since it is explicitly called out as legal by our FE/BE protocol spec, we'd probably better continue to allow it. Fix by adding tests everywhere that the raw_parse_tree field is passed to functions that don't or shouldn't accept NULL. Also make it clear in the relevant comments that NULL is an expected case. This reverts commits a73c9dbab0165b3395dfe8a44a7dfd16166963c4 and 2e9650cbcff8c8fb0d9ef807c73a44f241822eee, which fixed specific crash symptoms by hacking things at what now seems to be the wrong end, ie the callee functions. Making the callees allow NULL is superficially more robust, but it's not always true that there is a defensible thing for the callee to do in such cases. The caller has more context and is better able to decide what the empty-query case ought to do. Per followup discussion of bug #11335. Back-patch to 9.2. The code before that is sufficiently different that it would require development of a separate patch, which doesn't seem worthwhile for what is believed to be an essentially cosmetic change.
2014-11-12Fix several weaknesses in slot and logical replication on-disk serialization.Andres Freund
Heikki noticed in 544E23C0.8090605@vmware.com that slot.c and snapbuild.c were missing the FIN_CRC32 call when computing/checking checksums of on disk files. That doesn't lower the the error detection capabilities of the checksum, but is inconsistent with other usages. In a followup mail Heikki also noticed that, contrary to a comment, the 'version' and 'length' struct fields of replication slot's on disk data where not covered by the checksum. That's not likely to lead to actually missed corruption as those fields are cross checked with the expected version and the actual file length. But it's wrong nonetheless. As fixing these issues makes existing on disk files unreadable, bump the expected versions of on disk files for both slots and logical decoding historic catalog snapshots. This means that loading old files will fail with ERROR: "replication slot file ... has unsupported version 1" and ERROR: "snapbuild state file ... has unsupported version 1 instead of 2" respectively. Given the low likelihood of anybody already using these new features in a production setup that seems acceptable. Fixing these issues made me notice that there's no regression test covering the loading of historic snapshot from disk - so add one. Backpatch to 9.4 where these features were introduced.
2014-11-12Use just one database connection in the "tablespace" test.Noah Misch
On Windows, DROP TABLESPACE has a race condition when run concurrently with other processes having opened files in the tablespace. This led to a rare failure on buildfarm member frogmouth. Back-patch to 9.4, where the reconnection was introduced.
2014-11-11Message improvementsPeter Eisentraut
2014-11-11Fix dependency searching for case where column is visited before table.Tom Lane
When the recursive search in dependency.c visits a column and then later visits the whole table containing the column, it needs to propagate the drop-context flags for the table to the existing target-object entry for the column. Otherwise we might refuse the DROP (if not CASCADE) on the incorrect grounds that there was no automatic drop pathway to the column. Remarkably, this has not been reported before, though it's possible at least when an extension creates both a datatype and a table using that datatype. Rather than just marking the column as allowed to be dropped, it might seem good to skip the DROP COLUMN step altogether, since the later DROP of the table will surely get the job done. The problem with that is that the datatype would then be dropped before the table (since the whole situation occurred because we visited the datatype, and then recursed to the dependent column, before visiting the table). That seems pretty risky, and the case is rare enough that it doesn't seem worth expending a lot of effort or risk to make the drops happen in a safe order. So we just play dumb and delete the column separately according to the existing drop ordering rules. Per report from Petr Jelinek, though this is different from his proposed patch. Back-patch to 9.1, where extensions were introduced. There's currently no evidence that such cases can arise before 9.1, and in any case we would also need to back-patch cb5c2ba2d82688d29b5902d86b993a54355cad4d to 9.0 if we wanted to back-patch this.
2014-11-10Ensure that RowExprs and whole-row Vars produce the expected column names.Tom Lane
At one time it wasn't terribly important what column names were associated with the fields of a composite Datum, but since the introduction of operations like row_to_json(), it's important that looking up the rowtype ID embedded in the Datum returns the column names that users would expect. That did not work terribly well before this patch: you could get the column names of the underlying table, or column aliases from any level of the query, depending on minor details of the plan tree. You could even get totally empty field names, which is disastrous for cases like row_to_json(). To fix this for whole-row Vars, look to the RTE referenced by the Var, and make sure its column aliases are applied to the rowtype associated with the result Datums. This is a tad scary because we might have to return a transient RECORD type even though the Var is declared as having some named rowtype. In principle it should be all right because the record type will still be physically compatible with the named rowtype; but I had to weaken one Assert in ExecEvalConvertRowtype, and there might be third-party code containing similar assumptions. Similarly, RowExprs have to be willing to override the column names coming from a named composite result type and produce a RECORD when the column aliases visible at the site of the RowExpr differ from the underlying table's column names. In passing, revert the decision made in commit 398f70ec070fe601 to add an alias-list argument to ExecTypeFromExprList: better to provide that functionality in a separate function. This also reverts most of the code changes in d68581483564ec0f, which we don't need because we're no longer depending on the tupdesc found in the child plan node's result slot to be blessed. Back-patch to 9.4, but not earlier, since this solution changes the results in some cases that users might not have realized were buggy. We'll apply a more restricted form of this patch in older branches.
2014-11-07pg_basebackup: Adjust tests for long file name issuesPeter Eisentraut
Work around accidental test failures because the working directory path is too long by creating a temporary directory in the (hopefully shorter) system location, symlinking that to the working directory, and creating the tablespaces using the shorter path.
2014-11-07Fix generation of SP-GiST vacuum WAL records.Heikki Linnakangas
I broke these in 8776faa81cb651322b8993422bdd4633f1f6a487. Backpatch to 9.4, where that was done.
2014-11-06Cope with more than 64K phrases in a thesaurus dictionary.Tom Lane
dict_thesaurus stored phrase IDs in uint16 fields, so it would get confused and even crash if there were more than 64K entries in the configuration file. It turns out to be basically free to widen the phrase IDs to uint32, so let's just do so. This was complained of some time ago by David Boutin (in bug #7793); he later submitted an informal patch but it was never acted on. We now have another complaint (bug #11901 from Luc Ouellette) so it's time to make something happen. This is basically Boutin's patch, but for future-proofing I also added a defense against too many words per phrase. Note that we don't need any explicit defense against overflow of the uint32 counters, since before that happens we'd hit array allocation sizes that repalloc rejects. Back-patch to all supported branches because of the crash risk.
2014-11-06Fix normalization of numeric values in JSONB GIN indexes.Tom Lane
The default JSONB GIN opclass (jsonb_ops) converts numeric data values to strings for storage in the index. It must ensure that numeric values that would compare equal (such as 12 and 12.00) produce identical strings, else index searches would have behavior different from regular JSONB comparisons. Unfortunately the function charged with doing this was completely wrong: it could reduce distinct numeric values to the same string, or reduce equivalent numeric values to different strings. The former type of error would only lead to search inefficiency, but the latter type of error would cause index entries that should be found by a search to not be found. Repairing this bug therefore means that it will be necessary for 9.4 beta testers to reindex GIN jsonb_ops indexes, if they care about getting correct results from index searches involving numeric data values within the comparison JSONB object. Per report from Thomas Fanghaenel.
2014-11-06Prevent the unnecessary creation of .ready file for the timeline history file.Fujii Masao
Previously .ready file was created for the timeline history file at the end of an archive recovery even when WAL archiving was not enabled. This creation is unnecessary and causes .ready file to remain infinitely. This commit changes an archive recovery so that it creates .ready file for the timeline history file only when WAL archiving is enabled. Backpatch to all supported versions.
2014-11-04Drop no-longer-needed buffers during ALTER DATABASE SET TABLESPACE.Tom Lane
The previous coding assumed that we could just let buffers for the database's old tablespace age out of the buffer arena naturally. The folly of that is exposed by bug #11867 from Marc Munro: the user could later move the database back to its original tablespace, after which any still-surviving buffers would match lookups again and appear to contain valid data. But they'd be missing any changes applied while the database was in the new tablespace. This has been broken since ALTER SET TABLESPACE was introduced, so back-patch to all supported branches.
2014-11-02Re-remove dependency on the DLL of pythonxx.def file.Noah Misch
The reasons behind commit 0d147e43adcf5d2bff9caa073608f381a27439bf still stand, so this reverts the non-cosmetic portion of commit a7983e989d9cafc9cef49becfee054e34b1ed9b4. Back-patch to 9.4, where the latter commit first appeared.
2014-11-02Make ECPG test programs depend on "ecpg$(X)", not "ecpg".Noah Misch
Cygwin builds require this of dependencies pertaining to pattern rules. On Cygwin, stat("foo") in the absence of a file with that exact name can locate foo.exe. While GNU make uses stat() for dependencies of ordinary rules, it uses readdir() to assess dependencies of pattern rules. Therefore, a pattern rule dependency should match any underlying file name exactly. Back-patch to 9.4, where the dependency was introduced.
2014-11-02Fix win32setlocale.c const-related warnings.Noah Misch
Back-patch to 9.2, like commit db29620d4d16e08241f965ccd70d0f65883ff0de.
2014-11-02Add configure --enable-tap-tests optionPeter Eisentraut
Don't skip the TAP tests anymore when IPC::Run is not found. This will fail normally now.
2014-10-30Test IsInTransactionChain, not IsTransactionBlock, in vac_update_relstats.Tom Lane
As noted by Noah Misch, my initial cut at fixing bug #11638 didn't cover all cases where ANALYZE might be invoked in an unsafe context. We need to test the result of IsInTransactionChain not IsTransactionBlock; which is notationally a pain because IsInTransactionChain requires an isTopLevel flag, which would have to be passed down through several levels of callers. I chose to pass in_outer_xact (ie, the result of IsInTransactionChain) rather than isTopLevel per se, as that seemed marginally more apropos for the intermediate functions to know about.
2014-10-30"Pin", rather than "keep", dynamic shared memory mappings and segments.Robert Haas
Nobody seemed concerned about this naming when it originally went in, but there's a pending patch that implements the opposite of dsm_keep_mapping, and the term "unkeep" was judged unpalatable. "unpin" has existing precedent in the PostgreSQL code base, and the English language, so use this terminology instead. Per discussion, back-patch to 9.4.
2014-10-29Remove use of TAP subtestsPeter Eisentraut
They turned out to be too much of a portability headache, because they need a fairly new version of Test::More to work properly.
2014-10-29Avoid corrupting tables when ANALYZE inside a transaction is rolled back.Tom Lane
VACUUM and ANALYZE update the target table's pg_class row in-place, that is nontransactionally. This is OK, more or less, for the statistical columns, which are mostly nontransactional anyhow. It's not so OK for the DDL hint flags (relhasindex etc), which might get changed in response to transactional changes that could still be rolled back. This isn't a problem for VACUUM, since it can't be run inside a transaction block nor in parallel with DDL on the table. However, we allow ANALYZE inside a transaction block, so if the transaction had earlier removed the last index, rule, or trigger from the table, and then we roll back the transaction after ANALYZE, the table would be left in a corrupted state with the hint flags not set though they should be. To fix, suppress the hint-flag updates if we are InTransactionBlock(). This is safe enough because it's always OK to postpone hint maintenance some more; the worst-case consequence is a few extra searches of pg_index et al. There was discussion of instead using a transactional update, but that would change the behavior in ways that are not all desirable: in most scenarios we're better off keeping ANALYZE's statistical values even if the ANALYZE itself rolls back. In any case we probably don't want to change this behavior in back branches. Per bug #11638 from Casey Shobe. This has been broken for a good long time, so back-patch to all supported branches. Tom Lane and Michael Paquier, initial diagnosis by Andres Freund
2014-10-29Reset error message at PQreset()Heikki Linnakangas
If you call PQreset() repeatedly, and the connection cannot be re-established, the error messages from the failed connection attempts kept accumulating in the error string. Fixes bug #11455 reported by Caleb Epstein. Backpatch to all supported versions.
2014-10-28Remove obsolete commentary.Tom Lane
Since we got rid of non-MVCC catalog scans, the fourth reason given for using a non-transactional update in index_update_stats() is obsolete. The other three are still good, so we're not going to change the code, but fix the comment.
2014-10-28Remove unnecessary assignment.Heikki Linnakangas
Reported by MauMau.
2014-10-27MinGW: Include .dll extension in .def file LIBRARY commands.Noah Misch
Newer toolchains append the extension implicitly if missing, but buildfarm member narwhal (gcc 3.4.2, ld 2.15.91 20040904) does not. This affects most core libraries having an exports.txt file, namely libpq and the ECPG support libraries. On Windows Server 2003, Windows API functions that load and unload DLLs internally will mistakenly unload a libpq whose DLL header reports "LIBPQ" instead of "LIBPQ.dll". When, subsequently, control would return to libpq, the backend crashes. Back-patch to 9.4, like commit 846e91e0223cf9f2821c3ad4dfffffbb929cb027. Before that commit, we used a different linking technique that yielded "libpq.dll" in the DLL header. Commit 53566fc0940cf557416b13252df57350a4511ce4 worked around this by eliminating a call to a function that loads and unloads DLLs internally. That commit is no longer necessary for correctness, but its improving consistency with the MSVC build remains valid.
2014-10-27Fix two bugs in tsquery @> operator.Heikki Linnakangas
1. The comparison for matching terms used only the CRC to decide if there's a match. Two different terms with the same CRC gave a match. 2. It assumed that if the second operand has more terms than the first, it's never a match. That assumption is bogus, because there can be duplicate terms in either operand. Rewrite the implementation in a way that doesn't have those bugs. Backpatch to all supported versions.
2014-10-26Fix undersized result buffer in pset_quoted_string().Tom Lane
The malloc request was 1 byte too small for the worst-case output. This seems relatively unlikely to cause any problems in practice, as the worst case only occurs if the input string contains no characters other than single-quote or newline, and even then malloc alignment padding would probably save the day. But it's definitely a bug. David Rowley
2014-10-26Improve planning of btree index scans using ScalarArrayOpExpr quals.Tom Lane
Since we taught btree to handle ScalarArrayOpExpr quals natively (commit 9e8da0f75731aaa7605cf4656c21ea09e84d2eb1), the planner has always included ScalarArrayOpExpr quals in index conditions if possible. However, if the qual is for a non-first index column, this could result in an inferior plan because we can no longer take advantage of index ordering (cf. commit 807a40c551dd30c8dd5a0b3bd82f5bbb1e7fd285). It can be better to omit the ScalarArrayOpExpr qual from the index condition and let it be done as a filter, so that the output doesn't need to get sorted. Indeed, this is true for the query introduced as a test case by the latter commit. To fix, restructure get_index_paths and build_index_paths so that we consider paths both with and without ScalarArrayOpExpr quals in non-first index columns. Redesign the API of build_index_paths so that it reports what it found, saving useless second or third calls. Report and patch by Andrew Gierth (though rather heavily modified by me). Back-patch to 9.2 where this code was introduced, since the issue can result in significant performance regressions compared to plans produced by 9.1 and earlier.
2014-10-26Fix TAP tests with Perl 5.12Peter Eisentraut
Perl 5.12 ships with a somewhat broken version of Test::Simple, so skip the tests if that is found. The relevant fix is 0.98 Wed, 23 Feb 2011 14:38:02 +1100 Bug Fixes * subtest() should not fail if $? is non-zero. (Aaron Crane)
2014-10-26Fix TAP tests with Perl 5.8Peter Eisentraut
The prove program included in Perl 5.8 does not support the --ext option, so don't use that and use wildcards on the command line instead. Note that the tests will still all be skipped, because, for instance, the version of Test::More is too old, but at least the regular mechanisms for handling that will apply, instead of failing to call prove altogether.
2014-10-24Work around Windows locale name with non-ASCII character.Heikki Linnakangas
Windows has one a locale whose name contains a non-ASCII character: "Norwegian (Bokmål)" (that's an 'a' with a ring on top). That causes trouble; when passing it setlocale(), it's not clear what encoding the argument should be in. Another problem is that the locale name is stored in pg_database catalog table, and the encoding used there depends on what server encoding happens to be in use when the database is created. For example, if you issue the CREATE DATABASE when connected to a UTF-8 database, the locale name is stored in pg_database in UTF-8. As long as all locale names are pure ASCII, that's not a problem. To work around that, map the troublesome locale name to a pure-ASCII alias of the same locale, "norwegian-bokmal". Now, this doesn't change the existing values that are already in pg_database and in postgresql.conf. Old clusters will need to be fixed manually. Instructions for that need to be put in the release notes. This fixes bug #11431 reported by Alon Siman-Tov. Backpatch to 9.2; backpatching further would require more work than seems worth it.
2014-10-23Improve ispell dictionary's defenses against bad affix files.Tom Lane
Don't crash if an ispell dictionary definition contains flags but not any compound affixes. (This isn't a security issue since only superusers can install affix files, but still it's a bad thing.) Also, be more careful about detecting whether an affix-file FLAG command is old-format (ispell) or new-format (myspell/hunspell). And change the error message about mixed old-format and new-format commands into something intelligible. Per bug #11770 from Emre Hasegeli. Back-patch to all supported branches.
2014-10-23Prevent the already-archived WAL file from being archived again.Fujii Masao
Previously the archive recovery always created .ready file for the last WAL file of the old timeline at the end of recovery even when it's restored from the archive and has .done file. That is, there was the case where the WAL file had both .ready and .done files. This caused the already-archived WAL file to be archived again. This commit prevents the archive recovery from creating .ready file for the last WAL file if it has .done file, in order to prevent it from being archived again. This bug was added when cascading replication feature was introduced, i.e., the commit 5286105800c7d5902f98f32e11b209c471c0c69c. So, back-patch to 9.2, where cascading replication was added. Reviewed by Michael Paquier
2014-10-22Ensure libpq reports a suitable error message on unexpected socket EOF.Tom Lane
The EOF-detection logic in pqReadData was a bit confused about who should set up the error message in case the kernel gives us read-ready-but-no-data rather than ECONNRESET or some other explicit error condition. Since the whole point of this situation is that the lower-level functions don't know there's anything wrong, pqReadData itself must set up the message. But keep the assumption that if an errno was reported, a message was set up at lower levels. Per bug #11712 from Marko Tiikkaja. It's been like this for a very long time, so back-patch to all supported branches.
2014-10-21MinGW: Use -static-libgcc when linking a DLL.Noah Misch
When commit 846e91e0223cf9f2821c3ad4dfffffbb929cb027 switched the linker driver from dlltool/dllwrap to gcc, it became possible for linking to choose shared libgcc. Backends having loaded a module dynamically linked to libgcc can exit abnormally, which the postmaster treats like a crash. Resume use of static libgcc exclusively, like 9.3 and earlier. Back-patch to 9.4.
2014-10-21MinGW: Link with shell32.dll instead of shfolder.dll.Noah Misch
This improves consistency with the MSVC build. On buildfarm member narwhal, since commit 846e91e0223cf9f2821c3ad4dfffffbb929cb027, shfolder.dll:SHGetFolderPath() crashes when dblink calls it by way of pqGetHomeDirectory(). Back-patch to 9.4, where that commit first appeared. How it caused this regression remains a mystery. This is a partial revert of commit 889f03812916b146ae504c0fad5afdc7bf2e8a2a, which adopted shfolder.dll for Windows NT 4.0 compatibility. PostgreSQL 8.2 dropped support for that operating system.
2014-10-21Update expected/sequence_1.out.Tom Lane
The last three updates to the sequence regression test have all forgotten to touch the alternate expected-output file. Sigh. Michael Paquier
2014-10-20Flush unlogged table's buffers when copying or moving databases.Andres Freund
CREATE DATABASE and ALTER DATABASE .. SET TABLESPACE copy the source database directory on the filesystem level. To ensure the on disk state is consistent they block out users of the affected database and force a checkpoint to flush out all data to disk. Unfortunately, up to now, that checkpoint didn't flush out dirty buffers from unlogged relations. That bug means there could be leftover dirty buffers in either the template database, or the database in its old location. Leading to problems when accessing relations in an inconsistent state; and to possible problems during shutdown in the SET TABLESPACE case because buffers belonging files that don't exist anymore are flushed. This was reported in bug #10675 by Maxim Boguk. Fix by Pavan Deolasee, modified somewhat by me. Reviewed by MauMau and Fujii Masao. Backpatch to 9.1 where unlogged tables were introduced.
2014-10-20Correct volatility markings of a few json functions.Andrew Dunstan
json_agg and json_object_agg and their associated transition functions should have been marked as stable rather than immutable, as they call IO functions indirectly. Changing this probably isn't going to make much difference, as you can't use an aggregate function in an index expression, but we should be correct nevertheless. json_object, on the other hand, should be marked immutable rather than stable, as it does not call IO functions. As discussed on -hackers, this change is being made without bumping the catalog version, as we don't want to do that at this stage of the cycle, and the changes are very unlikely to affect anyone.