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2024-11-15Fix per-session activation of ALTER {ROLE|DATABASE} SET role.Noah Misch
After commit 5a2fed911a85ed6d8a015a6bafe3a0d9a69334ae, the catalog state resulting from these commands ceased to affect sessions. Restore the longstanding behavior, which is like beginning the session with a SET ROLE command. If cherry-picking the CVE-2024-10978 fixes, default to including this, too. (This fixes an unintended side effect of fixing CVE-2024-10978.) Back-patch to v12, like that commit. The release team decided to include v12, despite the original intent to halt v12 commits earlier this week. Tom Lane and Noah Misch. Reported by Etienne LAFARGE. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CADOZwSb0UsEr4_UTFXC5k7=fyyK8uKXekucd+-uuGjJsGBfxgw@mail.gmail.com
2024-11-15Fix a possibility of logical replication slot's restart_lsn going backwards.Masahiko Sawada
Previously LogicalIncreaseRestartDecodingForSlot() accidentally accepted any LSN as the candidate_lsn and candidate_valid after the restart_lsn of the replication slot was updated, so it potentially caused the restart_lsn to move backwards. A scenario where this could happen in logical replication is: after a logical replication restart, based on previous candidate_lsn and candidate_valid values in memory, the restart_lsn advances upon receiving a subscriber acknowledgment. Then, logical decoding restarts from an older point, setting candidate_lsn and candidate_valid based on an old RUNNING_XACTS record. Subsequent subscriber acknowledgments then update the restart_lsn to an LSN older than the current value. In the reported case, after WAL files were removed by a checkpoint, the retreated restart_lsn prevented logical replication from restarting due to missing WAL segments. This change essentially modifies the 'if' condition to 'else if' condition within the function. The previous code had an asymmetry in this regard compared to LogicalIncreaseXminForSlot(), which does almost the same thing for different fields. The WAL removal issue was reported by Hubert Depesz Lubaczewski. Backpatch to all supported versions, since the bug exists since 9.4 where logical decoding was introduced. Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra, Ashutosh Bapat, Amit Kapila Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Yz2hivgyjS1RfMKs%40depesz.com Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/85fff40e-148b-4e86-b921-b4b846289132%40vondra.me Backpatch-through: 13
2024-11-12Fix arrays comparison in CompareOpclassOptions()Alexander Korotkov
The current code calls array_eq() and does not provide FmgrInfo. This commit provides initialization of FmgrInfo and uses C collation as the safe option for text comparison because we don't know anything about the semantics of opclass options. Backpatch to 13, where opclass options were introduced. Reported-by: Nicolas Maus Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18692-72ea398df3ec6712%40postgresql.org Backpatch-through: 13
2024-11-11Parallel workers use AuthenticatedUserId for connection privilege checks.Tom Lane
Commit 5a2fed911 had an unexpected side-effect: the parallel worker launched for the new test case would fail if it couldn't use a superuser-reserved connection slot. The reason that test failed while all our pre-existing ones worked is that the connection privilege tests in InitPostgres had been based on the superuserness of the leader's AuthenticatedUserId, but after the rearrangements of 5a2fed911 we were testing the superuserness of CurrentUserId, which the new test case deliberately made to be a non-superuser. This all seems very accidental and probably not the behavior we really want, but a security patch is no time to be redesigning things. Pending some discussion about desirable semantics, hack it so that InitPostgres continues to pay attention to the superuserness of AuthenticatedUserId when starting a parallel worker. Nathan Bossart and Tom Lane, per buildfarm member sawshark. Security: CVE-2024-10978
2024-11-11Fix cross-version upgrade tests.Tom Lane
TestUpgradeXversion knows how to make the main regression database's references to pg_regress.so be version-independent. But it doesn't do that for plperl's database, so that the C function added by commit b7e3a52a8 is causing cross-version upgrade test failures. Path of least resistance is to just drop the function at the end of the new test. In <= v14, also take the opportunity to clean up the generated test files. Security: CVE-2024-10979
2024-11-11src/tools/msvc: Respect REGRESS_OPTS in plcheck.Noah Misch
v16 commit 8fe3e697a1a83a722b107c7cb9c31084e1f4d077 used REGRESS_OPTS in a way needing this. That broke "vcregress plcheck". Back-patch v16..v12; newer versions don't have this build system.
2024-11-11Add needed .gitignore files in back branches.Tom Lane
v14 and earlier use generated test files, which require being .gitignore'd to avoid git complaints when testing in-tree. Security: CVE-2024-10979
2024-11-11Fix improper interactions between session_authorization and role.Tom Lane
The SQL spec mandates that SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION implies SET ROLE NONE. We tried to implement that within the lowest-level functions that manipulate these settings, but that was a bad idea. In particular, guc.c assumes that it doesn't matter in what order it applies GUC variable updates, but that was not the case for these two variables. This problem, compounded by some hackish attempts to work around it, led to some security-grade issues: * Rolling back a transaction that had done SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION would revert to SET ROLE NONE, even if that had not been the previous state, so that the effective user ID might now be different from what it had been. * The same for SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION in a function SET clause. * If a parallel worker inspected current_setting('role'), it saw "none" even when it should see something else. Also, although the parallel worker startup code intended to cope with the current role's pg_authid row having disappeared, its implementation of that was incomplete so it would still fail. Fix by fully separating the miscinit.c functions that assign session_authorization from those that assign role. To implement the spec's requirement, teach set_config_option itself to perform "SET ROLE NONE" when it sets session_authorization. (This is undoubtedly ugly, but the alternatives seem worse. In particular, there's no way to do it within assign_session_authorization without incompatible changes in the API for GUC assign hooks.) Also, improve ParallelWorkerMain to directly set all the relevant user-ID variables instead of relying on some of them to get set indirectly. That allows us to survive not finding the pg_authid row during worker startup. In v16 and earlier, this includes back-patching 9987a7bf3 which fixed a violation of GUC coding rules: SetSessionAuthorization is not an appropriate place to be throwing errors from. Security: CVE-2024-10978
2024-11-11Ensure cached plans are correctly marked as dependent on role.Nathan Bossart
If a CTE, subquery, sublink, security invoker view, or coercion projection references a table with row-level security policies, we neglected to mark the plan as potentially dependent on which role is executing it. This could lead to later executions in the same session returning or hiding rows that should have been hidden or returned instead. Reported-by: Wolfgang Walther Reviewed-by: Noah Misch Security: CVE-2024-10976 Backpatch-through: 12
2024-11-11Block environment variable mutations from trusted PL/Perl.Noah Misch
Many process environment variables (e.g. PATH), bypass the containment expected of a trusted PL. Hence, trusted PLs must not offer features that achieve setenv(). Otherwise, an attacker having USAGE privilege on the language often can achieve arbitrary code execution, even if the attacker lacks a database server operating system user. To fix PL/Perl, replace trusted PL/Perl %ENV with a tied hash that just replaces each modification attempt with a warning. Sites that reach these warnings should evaluate the application-specific implications of proceeding without the environment modification: Can the application reasonably proceed without the modification? If no, switch to plperlu or another approach. If yes, the application should change the code to stop attempting environment modifications. If that's too difficult, add "untie %main::ENV" in any code executed before the warning. For example, one might add it to the start of the affected function or even to the plperl.on_plperl_init setting. In passing, link to Perl's guidance about the Perl features behind the security posture of PL/Perl. Back-patch to v12 (all supported versions). Andrew Dunstan and Noah Misch Security: CVE-2024-10979
2024-11-11Translation updatesPeter Eisentraut
Source-Git-URL: https://git.postgresql.org/git/pgtranslation/messages.git Source-Git-Hash: be7f3c3a26b382c9d7c9d32c7a972e452b56f529
2024-11-11libpq: Bail out during SSL/GSS negotiation errorsMichael Paquier
This commit changes libpq so that errors reported by the backend during the protocol negotiation for SSL and GSS are discarded by the client, as these may include bytes that could be consumed by the client and write arbitrary bytes to a client's terminal. A failure with the SSL negotiation now leads to an error immediately reported, without a retry on any other methods allowed, like a fallback to a plaintext connection. A failure with GSS discards the error message received, and we allow a fallback as it may be possible that the error is caused by a connection attempt with a pre-11 server, GSS encryption having been introduced in v12. This was a problem only with v17 and newer versions; older versions discard the error message already in this case, assuming a failure caused by a lack of support for GSS encryption. Author: Jacob Champion Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut, Heikki Linnakangas, Michael Paquier Security: CVE-2024-10977 Backpatch-through: 12
2024-11-08Improve fix for not entering parallel mode when holding interrupts.Tom Lane
Commit ac04aa84a put the shutoff for this into the planner, which is not ideal because it doesn't prevent us from re-using a previously made parallel plan. Revert the planner change and instead put the shutoff into InitializeParallelDSM, modeling it on the existing code there for recovering from failure to allocate a DSM segment. However, that code path is mostly untested, and testing a bit harder showed there's at least one bug: ExecHashJoinReInitializeDSM is not prepared for us to have skipped doing parallel DSM setup. I also thought the Assert in ReinitializeParallelWorkers is pretty ill-advised, and replaced it with a silent Min() operation. The existing test case added by ac04aa84a serves fine to test this version of the fix, so no change needed there. Patch by me, but thanks to Noah Misch for the core idea that we could shut off worker creation when !INTERRUPTS_CAN_BE_PROCESSED. Back-patch to v12, as ac04aa84a was. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAC-SaSzHUKT=vZJ8MPxYdC_URPfax+yoA1hKTcF4ROz_Q6z0_Q@mail.gmail.com
2024-11-08Disallow partitionwise join when collations don't matchAmit Langote
If the collation of any join key column doesn’t match the collation of the corresponding partition key, partitionwise joins can yield incorrect results. For example, rows that would match under the join key collation might be located in different partitions due to the partitioning collation. In such cases, a partitionwise join would yield different results from a non-partitionwise join, so disallow it in such cases. Reported-by: Tender Wang <tndrwang@gmail.com> Author: Jian He <jian.universality@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Tender Wang <tndrwang@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Junwang Zhao <zhjwpku@gmail.com> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHewXNno_HKiQ6PqyLYfuqDtwp7KKHZiH1J7Pqyz0nr+PS2Dwg@mail.gmail.com Backpatch-through: 12
2024-11-08Disallow partitionwise grouping when collations don't matchAmit Langote
If the collation of any grouping column doesn’t match the collation of the corresponding partition key, partitionwise grouping can yield incorrect results. For example, rows that would be grouped under the grouping collation may end up in different partitions under the partitioning collation. In such cases, full partitionwise grouping would produce results that differ from those without partitionwise grouping, so disallowed that. Partial partitionwise aggregation is still allowed, as the Finalize step reconciles partition-level aggregates with grouping requirements across all partitions, ensuring that the final output remains consistent. This commit also fixes group_by_has_partkey() by ensuring the RelabelType node is stripped from grouping expressions when matching them to partition key expressions to avoid false mismatches. Bug: #18568 Reported-by: Webbo Han <1105066510@qq.com> Author: Webbo Han <1105066510@qq.com> Reviewed-by: Tender Wang <tndrwang@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Aleksander Alekseev <aleksander@timescale.com> Reviewed-by: Jian He <jian.universality@gmail.com> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18568-2a9afb6b9f7e6ed3@postgresql.org Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/tencent_9D9103CDA420C07768349CC1DFF88465F90A@qq.com Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHewXNno_HKiQ6PqyLYfuqDtwp7KKHZiH1J7Pqyz0nr+PS2Dwg@mail.gmail.com Backpatch-through: 12
2024-11-08Message style improvementPeter Eisentraut
Backpatch the part of edee0c621de that applies to a90bdd7a44d, which was also backpatched. That way, the message is consistent in all branches.
2024-11-08Fix lstat() for broken junction points on Windows.Thomas Munro
When using junction points to emulate symlinks on Windows, one edge case was not handled correctly by commit c5cb8f3b: if a junction point is broken (pointing to a non-existent path), we'd report ENOENT. This doesn't break any known use case, but was noticed while developing a test suite for these functions and is fixed here for completeness. Also add translation ERROR_CANT_RESOLVE_FILENAME -> ENOENT, as that is one of the errors Windows can report for some kinds of broken paths. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKG%2BajSQ_8eu2AogTncOnZ5me2D-Cn66iN_-wZnRjLN%2Bicg%40mail.gmail.com (cherry picked from commit 387803d81d6256fcb60b9192bb5b00042442b4e3) Author: Thomas Munro <tmunro@postgresql.org> Author: Alexandra Wang <alexandra.wang.oss@gmail.com>
2024-11-08Provide lstat() for Windows.Thomas Munro
Junction points will be reported with S_ISLNK(x.st_mode), simulating POSIX lstat(). stat() will follow pseudo-symlinks, like in POSIX (but only one level before giving up, unlike in POSIX). This completes a TODO left by commit bed90759fcb. Tested-by: Andrew Dunstan <andrew@dunslane.net> (earlier version) Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGLfOOeyZpm5ByVcAt7x5Pn-%3DxGRNCvgiUPVVzjFLtnY0w%40mail.gmail.com (cherry picked from commit c5cb8f3b770c043509b61528664bcd805e1777e6) Author: Thomas Munro <tmunro@postgresql.org> Author: Alexandra Wang <alexandra.wang.oss@gmail.com>
2024-11-08Make unlink() work for junction points on Windows.Thomas Munro
To support harmonization of Windows and Unix code, teach our unlink() wrapper that junction points need to be unlinked with rmdir() on Windows. Tested-by: Andrew Dunstan <andrew@dunslane.net> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGLfOOeyZpm5ByVcAt7x5Pn-%3DxGRNCvgiUPVVzjFLtnY0w%40mail.gmail.com (cherry picked from commit f357233c9db8be2a015163da8e1ab0630f444340) Author: Thomas Munro <tmunro@postgresql.org> Author: Alexandra Wang <alexandra.wang.oss@gmail.com>
2024-11-08Add missing include guard to win32ntdll.h.Thomas Munro
Oversight in commit e2f0f8ed. Also add this file to the exclusion lists in headerscheck and cpluscpluscheck, because Unix systems don't have a header it includes. Reported-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2760528.1641929756%40sss.pgh.pa.us (cherry picked from commit af9e6331aeba149c93052c3549140082a85a3cf9) Author: Thomas Munro <tmunro@postgresql.org> Author: Alexandra Wang <alexandra.wang.oss@gmail.com>
2024-11-08Check for STATUS_DELETE_PENDING on Windows.Thomas Munro
1. Update our open() wrapper to check for NT's STATUS_DELETE_PENDING and translate it to Unix-like errors. This is done with RtlGetLastNtStatus(), which is dynamically loaded from ntdll. A new file win32ntdll.c centralizes lookup of NT functions, in case we decide to add more in the future. 2. Remove non-working code that was trying to do something similar for stat(), and just reuse the open() wrapper code. As a side effect, stat() also gains resilience against "sharing violation" errors. 3. Since stat() is used very early in process startup, remove the requirement that the Win32 signal event has been created before pgwin32_open_handle() is reached. Instead, teach pg_usleep() to fall back to a non-interruptible sleep if reached before the signal event is available. This could be back-patched, but for now it's in master only. The problem has apparently been with us for a long time and generated only a few complaints. Proposed patches trigger it more often, which led to this investigation and fix. Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> Reviewed-by: Alexander Lakhin <exclusion@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Juan José Santamaría Flecha <juanjo.santamaria@gmail.com> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGJz_pZTF9mckn6XgSv69%2BjGwdgLkxZ6b3NWGLBCVjqUZA%40mail.gmail.com (cherry picked from commit e2f0f8ed251d02c1eda79e1ca3cb3db2681e7a86) Author: Thomas Munro <tmunro@postgresql.org> Author: Alexandra Wang <alexandra.wang.oss@gmail.com>
2024-11-08Fix -Wcast-function-type warningsPeter Eisentraut
Three groups of issues needed to be addressed: load_external_function() and related functions returned PGFunction, even though not necessarily all callers are looking for a function of type PGFunction. Since these functions are really just wrappers around dlsym(), change to return void * just like dlsym(). In dynahash.c, we are using strlcpy() where a function with a signature like memcpy() is expected. This should be safe, as the new comment there explains, but the cast needs to be augmented to avoid the warning. In PL/Python, methods all need to be cast to PyCFunction, per Python API, but this now runs afoul of these warnings. (This issue also exists in core CPython.) To fix the second and third case, we add a new type pg_funcptr_t that is defined specifically so that gcc accepts it as a special function pointer that can be cast to any other function pointer without the warning. Also add -Wcast-function-type to the standard warning flags, subject to configure check. Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/1e97628e-6447-b4fd-e230-d109cec2d584%402ndquadrant.com (cherry picked from commit de8feb1f3a23465b5737e8a8c160e8ca62f61339) Author: Peter Eisentraut <peter@eisentraut.org> Author: Alexandra Wang <alexandra.wang.oss@gmail.com>
2024-11-08Fix issues with Windows' stat() for files pending on deletionMichael Paquier
The code introduced by bed9075 to enhance the stat() implementation on Windows for file sizes larger than 4GB fails to properly detect files pending for deletion with its method based on NtQueryInformationFile() or GetFileInformationByHandleEx(), as proved by Alexander Lakhin in a custom TAP test of his own. The method used in the implementation of open() to sleep and loop when when failing on ERROR_ACCESS_DENIED (EACCES) is showing much more stability, so switch to this method. This could still lead to issues if the permission problem stays around for much longer than the timeout of 1 second used, but that should (hopefully) never happen in performance-critical paths. Still, there could be a point in increasing the timeouts for the sake of machines that handle heavy loads. Note that WIN32's open() now uses microsoft_native_stat() as it should be similar to stat() when working around issues with concurrent file deletions. I have spent some time testing this patch with pgbench in combination of the SQL functions from genfile.c, as well as running the TAP test provided on the thread with MSVC builds, and this looks much more stable than the previous method. Author: Alexander Lakhin Reviewed-by: Tom Lane, Michael Paquier, Justin Pryzby Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c3427edf-d7c0-ff57-90f6-b5de3bb62709@gmail.com Backpatch-through: 14 (cherry picked from commit 54fb8c7ddf152629021cab3ac3596354217b7d81) Author: Alexandra Wang <alexandra.wang.oss@gmail.com>
2024-11-08Fix our Windows stat() emulation to handle file sizes > 4GB.Tom Lane
Hack things so that our idea of "struct stat" is equivalent to Windows' struct __stat64, allowing it to have a wide enough st_size field. Instead of relying on native stat(), use GetFileInformationByHandle(). This avoids a number of issues with Microsoft's multiple and rather slipshod emulations of stat(). We still need to jump through hoops to deal with ERROR_DELETE_PENDING, though :-( Pull the relevant support code out of dirmod.c and put it into its own file, win32stat.c. Still TODO: do we need to do something different with lstat(), rather than treating it identically to stat()? Juan José Santamaría Flecha, reviewed by Emil Iggland; based on prior work by Michael Paquier, Sergey Zubkovsky, and others Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1803D792815FC24D871C00D17AE95905CF5099@g01jpexmbkw24 Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15858-9572469fd3b73263@postgresql.org (cherry picked from commit bed90759fcbcd72d4d06969eebab81e47326f9a2) Author: Alexandra Wang <alexandra.wang.oss@gmail.com>
2024-11-06Monkey-patch LLVM code to fix ARM relocation bug.Thomas Munro
Supply a new memory manager for RuntimeDyld, to avoid crashes in generated code caused by memory placement that can overflow a 32 bit data type. This is a drop-in replacement for the llvm::SectionMemoryManager class in the LLVM library, with Michael Smith's proposed fix from https://www.github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/71968. We hereby slurp it into our own source tree, after moving into a new namespace llvm::backport and making some minor adjustments so that it can be compiled with older LLVM versions as far back as 12. It's harder to make it work on even older LLVM versions, but it doesn't seem likely that people are really using them so that is not investigated for now. The problem could also be addressed by switching to JITLink instead of RuntimeDyld, and that is the LLVM project's recommended solution as the latter is about to be deprecated. We'll have to do that soon enough anyway, and then when the LLVM version support window advances far enough in a few years we'll be able to delete this code. Unfortunately that wouldn't be enough for PostgreSQL today: in most relevant versions of LLVM, JITLink is missing or incomplete. Several other projects have already back-ported this fix into their fork of LLVM, which is a vote of confidence despite the lack of commit into LLVM as of today. We don't have our own copy of LLVM so we can't do exactly what they've done; instead we have a copy of the whole patched class so we can pass an instance of it to RuntimeDyld. The LLVM project hasn't chosen to commit the fix yet, and even if it did, it wouldn't be back-ported into the releases of LLVM that most of our users care about, so there is not much point in waiting any longer for that. If they make further changes and commit it to LLVM 19 or 20, we'll still need this for older versions, but we may want to resynchronize our copy and update some comments. The changes that we've had to make to our copy can be seen by diffing our SectionMemoryManager.{h,cpp} files against the ones in the tree of the pull request. Per the LLVM project's license requirements, a copy is in SectionMemoryManager.LICENSE. This should fix the spate of crash reports we've been receiving lately from users on large memory ARM systems. Back-patch to all supported releases. Co-authored-by: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Anthonin Bonnefoy <anthonin.bonnefoy@datadoghq.com> Reviewed-by: Anthonin Bonnefoy <anthonin.bonnefoy@datadoghq.com> Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se> (license aspects) Reported-by: Anthonin Bonnefoy <anthonin.bonnefoy@datadoghq.com> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAO6_Xqr63qj%3DSx7HY6ZiiQ6R_JbX%2B-p6sTPwDYwTWZjUmjsYBg%40mail.gmail.com
2024-11-02Suppress new "may be used uninitialized" warning.Noah Misch
Buildfarm member mamba fails to deduce that the function never uses this variable without initializing it. Back-patch to v12, like commit b412f402d1e020c5dac94f3bf4a005db69519b99.
2024-11-02Move I/O before the index_update_stats() buffer lock region.Noah Misch
Commit a07e03fd8fa7daf4d1356f7cb501ffe784ea6257 enlarged the work done here under the pg_class heap buffer lock. Two preexisting actions are best done before holding that lock. Both RelationGetNumberOfBlocks() and visibilitymap_count() do I/O, and the latter might exclusive-lock a visibility map buffer. Moving these reduces contention and risk of undetected LWLock deadlock. Back-patch to v12, like that commit. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20241031200139.b4@rfd.leadboat.com
2024-11-02Revert "For inplace update, send nontransactional invalidations."Noah Misch
This reverts commit 95c5acb3fc261067ab65ddc0b2dca8e162f09442 (v17) and counterparts in each other non-master branch. If released, that commit would have caused a worst-in-years minor release regression, via undetected LWLock self-deadlock. This commit and its self-deadlock fix warrant more bake time in the master branch. Reported by Alexander Lakhin. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/10ec0bc3-5933-1189-6bb8-5dec4114558e@gmail.com
2024-11-02Revert "WAL-log inplace update before revealing it to other sessions."Noah Misch
This reverts commit bfd5c6e279c8e1702eea882439dc7ebdf4d4b3a5 (v17) and counterparts in each other non-master branch. This unblocks reverting a commit on which it depends. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/10ec0bc3-5933-1189-6bb8-5dec4114558e@gmail.com
2024-10-29Unpin buffer before inplace update waits for an XID to end.Noah Misch
Commit a07e03fd8fa7daf4d1356f7cb501ffe784ea6257 changed inplace updates to wait for heap_update() commands like GRANT TABLE and GRANT DATABASE. By keeping the pin during that wait, a sequence of autovacuum workers and an uncommitted GRANT starved one foreground LockBufferForCleanup() for six minutes, on buildfarm member sarus. Prevent, at the cost of a bit of complexity. Back-patch to v12, like the earlier commit. That commit and heap_inplace_lock() have not yet appeared in any release. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20241026184936.ae.nmisch@google.com
2024-10-29Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2024b.Tom Lane
Historical corrections for Mexico, Mongolia, and Portugal. Notably, Asia/Choibalsan is now an alias for Asia/Ulaanbaatar rather than being a separate zone, mainly because the differences between those zones were found to be based on untrustworthy data.
2024-10-29doc: Add better description for rewrite functions in event triggersMichael Paquier
There are two functions that can be used in event triggers to get more details about a rewrite happening on a relation. Both had a limited documentation: - pg_event_trigger_table_rewrite_reason() and pg_event_trigger_table_rewrite_oid() were not mentioned in the main event trigger section in the paragraph dedicated to the event table_rewrite. - pg_event_trigger_table_rewrite_reason() returns an integer which is a bitmap of the reasons why a rewrite happens. There was no explanation about the meaning of these values, forcing the reader to look at the code to find out that these are defined in event_trigger.h. While on it, let's add a comment in event_trigger.h where the AT_REWRITE_* are defined, telling to update the documentation when these values are changed. Backpatch down to 13 as a consequence of 1ad23335f36b, where this area of the documentation has been heavily reworked. Author: Greg Sabino Mullane Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKAnmmL+Z6j-C8dAx1tVrnBmZJu+BSoc68WSg3sR+CVNjBCqbw@mail.gmail.com Backpatch-through: 13
2024-10-25WAL-log inplace update before revealing it to other sessions.Noah Misch
A buffer lock won't stop a reader having already checked tuple visibility. If a vac_update_datfrozenid() and then a crash happened during inplace update of a relfrozenxid value, datfrozenxid could overtake relfrozenxid. That could lead to "could not access status of transaction" errors. Back-patch to v12 (all supported versions). In v14 and earlier, this also back-patches the assertion removal from commit 7fcf2faf9c7dd473208fd6d5565f88d7f733782b. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20240620012908.92.nmisch@google.com
2024-10-25For inplace update, send nontransactional invalidations.Noah Misch
The inplace update survives ROLLBACK. The inval didn't, so another backend's DDL could then update the row without incorporating the inplace update. In the test this fixes, a mix of CREATE INDEX and ALTER TABLE resulted in a table with an index, yet relhasindex=f. That is a source of index corruption. Back-patch to v12 (all supported versions). The back branch versions don't change WAL, because those branches just added end-of-recovery SIResetAll(). All branches change the ABI of extern function PrepareToInvalidateCacheTuple(). No PGXN extension calls that, and there's no apparent use case in extensions. Reviewed by Nitin Motiani and (in earlier versions) Andres Freund. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20240523000548.58.nmisch@google.com
2024-10-25At end of recovery, reset all sinval-managed caches.Noah Misch
An inplace update's invalidation messages are part of its transaction's commit record. However, the update survives even if its transaction aborts or we stop recovery before replaying its transaction commit. After recovery, a backend that started in recovery could update the row without incorporating the inplace update. That could result in a table with an index, yet relhasindex=f. That is a source of index corruption. This bulk invalidation avoids the functional consequences. A future change can fix the !RecoveryInProgress() scenario without changing the WAL format. Back-patch to v17 - v12 (all supported versions). v18 will instead add invalidations to WAL. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20240618152349.7f.nmisch@google.com
2024-10-24Stop reading uninitialized memory in heap_inplace_lock().Noah Misch
Stop computing a never-used value. This removes the read; the read had no functional implications. Back-patch to v12, like commit a07e03fd8fa7daf4d1356f7cb501ffe784ea6257. Reported by Alexander Lakhin. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/6c92f59b-f5bc-e58c-9bdd-d1f21c17c786@gmail.com
2024-10-23Remove unnecessary word in a commentAmit Langote
Relations opened by the executor are only closed once in ExecCloseRangeTableRelations(), so the word "again" in the comment for ExecGetRangeTableRelation() is misleading and unnecessary. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+HiwqHnw-zR+u060i3jp4ky5UR0CjByRFQz50oZ05de7wUg=Q@mail.gmail.com Backpatch-through: 12
2024-10-23ecpg: Fix out-of-bound read in DecodeDateTime()Michael Paquier
It was possible for the code to read out-of-bound data from the "day_tab" table with some crafted input data. Let's treat these as invalid input as the month number is incorrect. A test is added to test this case with a check on the errno returned by the decoding routine. A test close to the new one added in this commit was testing for a failure, but did not look at the errno generated, so let's use this commit to also change it, adding a check on the errno returned by DecodeDateTime(). Like the other test scripts, dt_test should likely be expanded to include more checks based on the errnos generated in these code paths. This is left as future work. This issue exists since 2e6f97560a83, so backpatch all the way down. Reported-by: Pavel Nekrasov Author: Bruce Momjian, Pavel Nekrasov Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18614-6bbe00117352309e@postgresql.org Backpatch-through: 12
2024-10-22Restructure foreign key handling code for ATTACH/DETACHÁlvaro Herrera
... to fix bugs when the referenced table is partitioned. The catalog representation we chose for foreign keys connecting partitioned tables (in commit f56f8f8da6af) is inconvenient, in the sense that a standalone table has a different way to represent the constraint when referencing a partitioned table, than when the same table becomes a partition (and vice versa). Because of this, we need to create additional catalog rows on detach (pg_constraint and pg_trigger), and remove them on attach. We were doing some of those things, but not all of them, leading to missing catalog rows in certain cases. The worst problem seems to be that we are missing action triggers after detaching a partition, which means that you could update/delete rows from the referenced partitioned table that still had referencing rows on that table, the server failing to throw the required errors. !!! Note that this means existing databases with FKs that reference partitioned tables might have rows that break relational integrity, on tables that were once partitions on the referencing side of the FK. Another possible problem is that trying to reattach a table that had been detached would fail indicating that internal triggers cannot be found, which from the user's point of view is nonsensical. In branches 15 and above, we fix this by creating a new helper function addFkConstraint() which is in charge of creating a standalone pg_constraint row, and repurposing addFkRecurseReferencing() and addFkRecurseReferenced() so that they're only the recursive routine for each side of the FK, and they call addFkConstraint() to create pg_constraint at each partitioning level and add the necessary triggers. These new routines can be used during partition creation, partition attach and detach, and foreign key creation. This reduces redundant code and simplifies the flow. In branches 14 and 13, we have a much simpler fix that consists on simply removing the constraint on detach. The reason is that those branches are missing commit f4566345cf40, which reworked the way this works in a way that we didn't consider back-patchable at the time. We opted to leave branch 12 alone, because it's different from branch 13 enough that the fix doesn't apply; and because it is going in EOL mode very soon, patching it now might be worse since there's no way to undo the damage if it goes wrong. Existing databases might need to be repaired. In the future we might want to rethink the catalog representation to avoid this problem, but for now the code seems to do what's required to make the constraints operate correctly. Co-authored-by: Jehan-Guillaume de Rorthais <jgdr@dalibo.com> Co-authored-by: Tender Wang <tndrwang@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org> Reported-by: Guillaume Lelarge <guillaume@lelarge.info> Reported-by: Jehan-Guillaume de Rorthais <jgdr@dalibo.com> Reported-by: Thomas Baehler (SBB CFF FFS) <thomas.baehler2@sbb.ch> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20230420144344.40744130@karst Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20230705233028.2f554f73@karst Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/GVAP278MB02787E7134FD691861635A8BC9032@GVAP278MB0278.CHEP278.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18541-628a61bc267cd2d3@postgresql.org
2024-10-21Fix wrong assertion and poor error messages in "COPY (query) TO".Tom Lane
If the query is rewritten into a NOTIFY command by a DO INSTEAD rule, we'd get an assertion failure, or in non-assert builds issue a rather confusing error message. Improve that. Also fix a longstanding grammar mistake in a nearby error message. Per bug #18664 from Alexander Lakhin. Back-patch to all supported branches. Tender Wang and Tom Lane Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18664-ffd0ebc2386598df@postgresql.org
2024-10-21Fix race condition in committing a serializable transactionHeikki Linnakangas
The finished transaction list can contain XIDs that are older than the serializable global xmin. It's a short-lived state; ClearOldPredicateLocks() removes any such transactions from the list, and it's called whenever the global xmin advances. But if another backend calls SummarizeOldestCommittedSxact() in that window, it will call SerialAdd() on an XID that's older than the global xmin, or if there are no more transactions running, when global xmin is invalid. That trips the assertion in SerialAdd(). Fixes bug #18658 reported by Andrew Bille. Thanks to Alexander Lakhin for analysis. Backpatch to all versions. Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/18658-7dab125ec688c70b%40postgresql.org
2024-10-17Fix extreme skew detection in Parallel Hash Join.Thomas Munro
After repartitioning the inner side of a hash join that would have exceeded the allowed size, we check if all the tuples from a parent partition moved to one child partition. That is evidence that it contains duplicate keys and later attempts to repartition will also fail, so we should give up trying to limit memory (for lack of a better fallback strategy). A thinko prevented the check from working correctly in partition 0 (the one that is partially loaded into memory already). After repartitioning, we should check for extreme skew if the *parent* partition's space_exhausted flag was set, not the child partition's. The consequence was repeated futile repartitioning until per-partition data exceeded various limits including "ERROR: invalid DSA memory alloc request size 1811939328", OS allocation failure, or temporary disk space errors. (We could also do something about some of those symptoms, but that's material for separate patches.) This problem only became likely when PostgreSQL 16 introduced support for Parallel Hash Right/Full Join, allowing NULL keys into the hash table. Repartitioning always leaves NULL in partition 0, no matter how many times you do it, because the hash value is all zero bits. That's unlikely for other hashed values, but they might still have caused wasted extra effort before giving up. Back-patch to all supported releases. Reported-by: Craig Milhiser <craig@milhiser.com> Reviewed-by: Andrei Lepikhov <lepihov@gmail.com> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BwnhO1OfgXbmXgC4fv_uu%3DOxcDQuHvfoQ4k0DFeB0Qqd-X-rQ%40mail.gmail.com
2024-10-16Further refine _SPI_execute_plan's rule for atomic execution.Tom Lane
Commit 2dc1deaea turns out to have been still a brick shy of a load, because CALL statements executing within a plpgsql exception block could still pass the wrong snapshot to stable functions within the CALL's argument list. That happened because standard_ProcessUtility forces isAtomicContext to true if IsTransactionBlock is true, which it always will be inside a subtransaction. Then ExecuteCallStmt would think it does not need to push a new snapshot --- but _SPI_execute_plan didn't do so either, since it thought it was in nonatomic mode. The best fix for this seems to be for _SPI_execute_plan to operate in atomic execution mode if IsSubTransaction() is true, even when the SPI context as a whole is non-atomic. This makes _SPI_execute_plan have the same rules about when non-atomic execution is allowed as _SPI_commit/_SPI_rollback have about when COMMIT/ROLLBACK are allowed, which seems appropriately symmetric. (If anyone ever tries to allow COMMIT/ROLLBACK inside a subtransaction, this would all need to be rethought ... but I'm unconvinced that such a thing could be logically consistent at all.) For further consistency, also check IsSubTransaction() in SPI_inside_nonatomic_context. That does not matter for its one present-day caller StartTransaction, which can't be reached inside a subtransaction. But if any other callers ever arise, they'd presumably want this definition. Per bug #18656 from Alexander Alehin. Back-patch to all supported branches, like previous fixes in this area. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18656-cade1780866ef66c@postgresql.org
2024-10-16Reduce memory block size for decoded tuple storage to 8kB.Masahiko Sawada
Commit a4ccc1cef introduced the Generation Context and modified the logical decoding process to use a Generation Context with a fixed block size of 8MB for storing tuple data decoded during logical decoding (i.e., rb->tup_context). Several reports have indicated that the logical decoding process can be terminated due to out-of-memory (OOM) situations caused by excessive memory usage in rb->tup_context. This issue can occur when decoding a workload involving several concurrent transactions, including a long-running transaction that modifies tuples. By design, the Generation Context does not free a memory block until all chunks within that block are released. Consequently, if tuples modified by the long-running transaction are stored across multiple memory blocks, these blocks remain allocated until the long-running transaction completes, leading to substantial memory fragmentation. The memory usage during logical decoding, tracked by rb->size, does not account for memory fragmentation, resulting in potentially much higher memory consumption than the value of the logical_decoding_work_mem parameter. Various improvement strategies were discussed in the relevant thread. This change reduces the block size of the Generation Context used in rb->tup_context from 8MB to 8kB. This modification significantly decreases the likelihood of substantial memory fragmentation occurring and is relatively straightforward to backport. Performance testing across multiple platforms has confirmed that this change will not introduce any performance degradation that would impact actual operation. Backport to all supported branches. Reported-by: Alex Richman, Michael Guissine, Avi Weinberg Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila, Fujii Masao, David Rowley Tested-by: Hayato Kuroda, Shlok Kyal Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoBTY1LATZUmvSXEssvq07qDZufV4AF-OHh9VD2pC0VY2A%40mail.gmail.com Backpatch-through: 12
2024-10-12Correctly identify which EC members are computable at a plan node.Tom Lane
find_computable_ec_member() had the wrong mental model of what its primary caller prepare_sort_from_pathkeys() would do with the selected EquivalenceClass member expression. We will not compute the EC expression in a plan node atop the one returning the passed-in targetlist; rather, the EC expression will be computed as an additional column of that targetlist. So any Var or quasi-Var used in the given tlist is also available to the EC expression. In simple cases this makes no difference because the given tlist is just a list of Vars or quasi-Vars --- but if we are considering an appendrel member produced by flattening a UNION ALL, the tlist may contain expressions, resulting in failure to match and a "could not find pathkey item to sort" error. To fix, we can flatten both the tlist and the EC members with pull_var_clause(), and then just check for subset-ness, so that the code is actually shorter than before. While this bug is quite old, the present patch only works back to v13. We could possibly make it work in v12 by back-patching parts of 375398244. On the whole though I don't like the risk/reward ratio of that idea. v12's final release is next month, meaning there would be no chance to correct matters if the patch causes a regression. Since this failure has escaped notice for 14 years, it's likely nobody will hit it in the field with v12. Per bug #18652 from Alexander Lakhin. Andrei Lepikhov and Tom Lane Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18652-deaa782ebcca85d1@postgresql.org
2024-10-09Remove incorrect function import from pgindentDaniel Gustafsson
Commit 149ac7d4559 which re-implemented pgindent in Perl explicitly imported the devnull function from File::Spec, but the module does not export anything. In recent versions of Perl calling a missing import function cause a warning, which combined with warnings being fatal cause pgindent to error out. Backpatch to all supported versions. Author: Erik Wienhold <ewie@ewie.name> Reviewed-by: Andrew Dunstan <andrew@dunslane.net> Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se> Discusson: https://postgr.es/m/2372cd74-11b0-46f9-b28e-8f9627215d19@ewie.name Backpatch-through: v12
2024-10-07vacuumdb: Schema-qualify operator in catalog query's WHERE clause.Nathan Bossart
Commit 1ab67c9dfa, which modified this catalog query so that it doesn't return temporary relations, forgot to schema-qualify the operator. A comment earlier in the function implores us to fully qualify everything in the query: * Since we execute the constructed query with the default search_path * (which could be unsafe), everything in this query MUST be fully * qualified. This commit fixes that. While at it, add a newline for consistency with surrounding code. Reviewed-by: Noah Misch Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ZwQJYcuPPUsF0reU%40nathan Backpatch-through: 12
2024-10-07Fix Y2038 issues with MyStartTime.Nathan Bossart
Several places treat MyStartTime as a "long", which is only 32 bits wide on some platforms. In reality, MyStartTime is a pg_time_t, i.e., a signed 64-bit integer. This will lead to interesting bugs on the aforementioned systems in 2038 when signed 32-bit integers are no longer sufficient to store Unix time (e.g., "pg_ctl start" hanging). To fix, ensure that MyStartTime is handled as a 64-bit value everywhere. (Of course, users will need to ensure that time_t is 64 bits wide on their system, too.) Co-authored-by: Max Johnson Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CO1PR07MB905262E8AC270FAAACED66008D682%40CO1PR07MB9052.namprd07.prod.outlook.com Backpatch-through: 12
2024-10-06Ignore not-yet-defined Portals in pg_cursors view.Tom Lane
pg_cursor() supposed that any Portal it finds in the hash table must have sourceText set up, but there's an edge case where that is not so. A newly-created Portal has sourceText = NULL, and that doesn't change until PortalDefineQuery is called. In SPI_cursor_open_internal, we perform GetCachedPlan between CreatePortal and PortalDefineQuery, and it's possible for user-defined code to execute during that planning and cause a fetch from the pg_cursors view, resulting in a null-pointer-dereference crash. (It looks like the same could happen in exec_bind_message, but I've not tried to provoke a failure there.) I considered trying to fix this by setting sourceText sooner, but there may be instances of this same calling pattern in extensions, and we couldn't be sure they'd get the memo promptly. It seems better to redefine pg_cursor as not showing Portals that have not yet had PortalDefineQuery called on them, which we can do by just skipping them if sourceText is still NULL. (Before a1c692358, pg_cursor would instead return a row with NULL in the statement column. We could revert to that behavior but it doesn't really seem like a better definition, especially since our documentation doesn't suggest that the column could be NULL.) Per report from PetSerAl. Back-patch to all supported branches. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKygsHTBXLXjwV43kpZa+Cs+XTiaeeJiZdL4cPBm9f4MTdw7wg@mail.gmail.com
2024-10-02Parse libpq's "keepalives" option more like other integer options.Tom Lane
Use pqParseIntParam (nee parse_int_param) instead of using strtol directly. This allows trailing whitespace, which the previous coding didn't, and makes the spelling of the error message consistent with other similar cases. This seems to be an oversight in commit e7a221797, which introduced parse_int_param. That fixed places that were using atoi(), but missed this place which was randomly using strtol() instead. Ordinarily I'd consider this minor cleanup not worth back-patching. However, it seems that ecpg assumes it can add trailing whitespace to URL parameters, so that use of the keepalives option fails in that context. Perhaps that's worth improving as a separate matter. In the meantime, back-patch this to all supported branches. Yuto Sasaki (some further cleanup by me) Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/TY2PR01MB36286A7B97B9A15793335D18C1772@TY2PR01MB3628.jpnprd01.prod.outlook.com