Make the distance control heuristics simpler and more aggressive in
preparation for asynchronous I/O.
The v17 version of read_stream.c made a conservative choice to limit the
look-ahead distance when streaming sequential blocks, because it
couldn't benefit very much from looking ahead further yet. It had a
three-behavior model where only random I/O would rapidly increase the
look-ahead distance, to support read-ahead advice. Sequential I/O would
move it towards the io_combine_limit setting, just enough to build one
full-sized synchronous I/O at a time, and then expect kernel read-ahead
to avoid I/O stalls.
That already left I/O performance on the table with advice-based I/O
concurrency, since sequential blocks could be followed by random jumps,
eg with the proposed streaming Bitmap Heap Scan patch.
It is time to delete the cautious middle option and adjust the distance
based on recent I/O needs only, since asynchronous reads will need to be
started ahead of time whether random or sequential. It is still limited
by io_combine_limit, *_io_concurrency, buffer availability and
strategy ring size, as before.
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> (earlier version)
Tested-by: Melanie Plageman <melanieplageman@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGK_%3D4CVmMHvsHjOVrK6t4F%3DLBpFzsrr3R%2BaJYN8kcTfWg%40mail.gmail.com
read_stream.c tries not to issue read-ahead advice when it thinks the
kernel's own read-ahead should be active, ie when using buffered I/O and
reading sequential blocks. It previously gave up too easily, and issued
advice only for the first read of up to io_combine_limit blocks in a
larger range of sequential blocks after random jump. The following read
could suffer an avoidable I/O stall.
Fix, by continuing to issue advice until the corresponding preadv()
calls catch up with the start of the region we're currently issuing
advice for, if ever. That's when the kernel actually sees the
sequential pattern. Advice is now disabled only when the stream is
entirely sequential as far as we can see in the look-ahead window, or
in other words, when a sequential region is larger than we can cover
with the current io_concurrency and io_combine_limit settings.
While refactoring the advice control logic, also get rid of the
"suppress_advice" argument that was passed around between functions to
skip useless posix_fadvise() calls immediately followed by preadv().
read_stream_start_pending_read() can figure that out, so let's
concentrate knowledge of advice heuristics in fewer places (our goal
being to make advice-based I/O concurrency a legacy mode soon).
The problem cases were revealed by Tomas Vondra's extensive regression
testing with many different disk access patterns using Melanie
Plageman's streaming Bitmap Heap Scan patch, in a battle against the
venerable always-issue-advice-and-always-one-block-at-a-time code.
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> (earlier version)
Reported-by: Melanie Plageman <melanieplageman@gmail.com>
Reported-by: Tomas Vondra <tomas@vondra.me>
Reported-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Tested-by: Melanie Plageman <melanieplageman@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGK_%3D4CVmMHvsHjOVrK6t4F%3DLBpFzsrr3R%2BaJYN8kcTfWg%40mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGJ3HSWciQCz8ekP1Zn7N213RfA4nbuotQawfpq23%2Bw-5Q%40mail.gmail.com
This commit introduces a new GUC, log_lock_failure, which controls whether
a detailed log message is produced when a lock acquisition fails. Currently,
it only supports logging lock failures caused by SELECT ... NOWAIT.
The log message includes information about all processes holding or
waiting for the lock that couldn't be acquired, helping users analyze and
diagnose the causes of lock failures.
Currently, this option does not log failures from SELECT ... SKIP LOCKED,
as that could generate excessive log messages if many locks are skipped,
causing unnecessary noise.
This mechanism can be extended in the future to support for logging
lock failures from other commands, such as LOCK TABLE ... NOWAIT.
Author: Yuki Seino <seinoyu@oss.nttdata.com>
Co-authored-by: Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jelte Fennema-Nio <postgres@jeltef.nl>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/411280a186cc26ef7034e0f2dfe54131@oss.nttdata.com
This commit improves efficiency in FastPathTransferRelationLocks()
and GetLockConflicts(), which iterate over PGPROCs to search for
fast-path locks.
Previously, these functions recalculated the fast-path group during
every loop iteration, even though it remained constant. This update
optimizes the process by calculating the group once and reusing it
throughout the loop.
The functions also now skip empty fast-path groups, avoiding
unnecessary scans of their slots. Additionally, groups belonging to
inactive backends (with pid=0) are always empty, so checking
the group is sufficient to bypass these backends, further enhancing
performance.
Author: Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi>
Reviewed-by: Ashutosh Bapat <ashutosh.bapat.oss@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/07d5fd6a-71f1-4ce8-8602-4cc6883f4bd1@oss.nttdata.com
PrepareSortSupportFromIndexRel() was accepting btree strategy numbers
purely for the purpose of comparing it later against btree strategies
to determine if the sort direction was forward or reverse. Change
that. Instead, pass a bool directly, to indicate the same without an
unfortunate assumption that a strategy number refers specifically to a
btree strategy. (This is similar in spirit to commits 0d2aa4d493 and
c594f1ad2ba.)
(This could arguably be simplfied further by having the callers fill
in ssup_reverse directly. But this way, it preserves consistency by
having all PrepareSortSupport*() variants be responsible for filling
in ssup_reverse.)
Moreover, remove the hardcoded check against BTREE_AM_OID, and check
against amcanorder instead, which is the actual requirement.
Co-authored-by: Mark Dilger <mark.dilger@enterprisedb.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/E72EAA49-354D-4C2E-8EB9-255197F55330@enterprisedb.com
It doesn't actually work, even with allow_system_table_mods turned on:
the ALTER TABLE operation is rejected by ATSimplePermissions(), so even
the error message we're adding in this commit is unreachable.
Add a test case for it.
Author: Nikolay Shaplov <dhyan@nataraj.su>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1913854.tdWV9SEqCh@thinkpad-pgpro
To avoid pinning too much of the buffer pool at once, read_stream.c
previously used LimitAdditionalPins(). The coding was naive, and only
considered the available buffers at stream construction time.
This commit checks before each StartReadBuffers() call with
GetAdditionalPinLimit(). The result might change over time due to pins
acquired outside this stream by the same backend. No extra CPU cycles
are added to the all-buffered fast-path code, but the I/O-starting path
now considers the up-to-date remaining buffer limit.
In practice it was quite difficult to exceed limits and cause any real
problems in v17, so no back-patch for now, but proposed changes will
make it easier.
Per code review from Andres, in the course of testing his AIO patches.
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> (earlier versions)
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGK_%3D4CVmMHvsHjOVrK6t4F%3DLBpFzsrr3R%2BaJYN8kcTfWg%40mail.gmail.com
Previously the support functions assumed that the caller needed one pin
to make progress, and could optionally use some more, allowing enough
for every connection to do the same. Add a couple more functions for
callers that want to know:
* what the maximum possible number could be, irrespective of currently
held pins, for space planning purposes
* how many additional pins they could acquire right now, without the
special case allowing one pin, for callers that already hold pins and
could already make progress even if no extra pins are available
The pin limit logic began in commit 31966b15. This refactoring is
better suited to read_stream.c, which will be adjusted to respect the
remaining limit as it changes over time in a follow-up commit. It also
computes MaxProportionalPins up front, to avoid performing divisions
whenever a caller needs to check the balance.
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> (earlier versions)
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGK_%3D4CVmMHvsHjOVrK6t4F%3DLBpFzsrr3R%2BaJYN8kcTfWg%40mail.gmail.com
The problem is that ALTER SUBSCRIPTION ... SET PUBLICATION ... will lead
to restarting of apply worker and after the restart, the apply worker will
use the existing slot and replication origin corresponding to the
subscription. Now, it is possible that before the restart, the origin has
not been updated, and the WAL start location points to a location before
where PUBLICATION pointed to by SET PUBLICATION doesn't exist, and that
can lead to an error like: "ERROR: publication "pub1" does not exist".
Once this error occurs, apply worker will never be able to proceed and
will always return the same error.
We decided to skip loading the publication if the publication does not
exist. The publication is loaded later and updates the relation entry when
the publication gets created.
We decided not to backpatch this as this is a behaviour change, and we don't
see field reports. This problem has been found by intermittent buildfarm
failures.
Author: vignesh C <vignesh21@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Dilip Kumar <dilipbalaut@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/flat/CALDaNm0-n8FGAorM%2BbTxkzn%2BAOUyx5%3DL_XmnvOP6T24%2B-NcBKg%40mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1+T-ETXeRM4DHWzGxBpKafLCp__5bPA_QZfFQp7-0wj4Q@mail.gmail.com
If the given input_type yields valid results from both
get_element_type and get_array_type, initArrayResultAny believed the
former and treated the input as an array type. However this is
inconsistent with what get_promoted_array_type does, leading to
situations where the output of an ARRAY() subquery is labeled with
the wrong type: it's labeled as oidvector[] but is really a 2-D
array of OID. That at least results in strange output, and can
result in crashes if further processing such as unnest() is applied.
AFAIK this is only possible with the int2vector and oidvector
types, which are special-cased to be treated mostly as true arrays
even though they aren't quite.
Fix by switching the logic to match get_promoted_array_type by
testing get_array_type not get_element_type, and remove an Assert
thereby made pointless. (We need not introduce a symmetrical
check for get_element_type in the other if-branch, because
initArrayResultArr will check it.) This restores the behavior
that existed before bac27394a introduced initArrayResultAny:
the output really is int2vector[] or oidvector[].
Comparable confusion exists when an input of an ARRAY[] construct
is int2vector or oidvector: transformArrayExpr decides it's dealing
with a multidimensional array constructor, and we end up with
something that's a multidimensional OID array but is alleged to be
of type oidvector. I have not found a crashing case here, but it's
easy to demonstrate totally-wrong results. Adjust that code so
that what you get is an oidvector[] instead, for consistency with
ARRAY() subqueries. (This change also makes these types work like
domains-over-arrays in this context, which seems correct.)
Bug: #18840
Reported-by: yang lei <ylshiyu@126.com>
Author: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18840-fbc9505f066e50d6@postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 13
We can make the output look a bit better by aligning each lock's
definition, so add some padding space to achieve that. This change
makes no practical difference, but casual onlookers will be less
distracted by (lack of) whitespace.
Author: Gurjeet Singh <gurjeet@singh.im>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CABwTF4VxfwDtRV-H22_XK4XeDogaV-Vaobu+af5U=8ZAZn9ZZQ@mail.gmail.com
We want to support a "noreturn" decoration on more compilers besides
just GCC-compatible ones, but for that we need to move the decoration
in front of the function declaration instead of either behind it or
wherever, which is the current style afforded by GCC-style attributes.
Also rename the macro to "pg_noreturn" to be similar to the C11
standard "noreturn".
pg_noreturn is now supported on all compilers that support C11 (using
_Noreturn), as well as GCC-compatible ones (using __attribute__, as
before), as well as MSVC (using __declspec). (When PostgreSQL
requires C11, the latter two variants can be dropped.)
Now, all supported compilers effectively support pg_noreturn, so the
extra code for !HAVE_PG_ATTRIBUTE_NORETURN can be dropped.
This also fixes a possible problem if third-party code includes
stdnoreturn.h, because then the current definition of
#define pg_attribute_noreturn() __attribute__((noreturn))
would cause an error.
Note that the C standard does not support a noreturn attribute on
function pointer types. So we have to drop these here. There are
only two instances at this time, so it's not a big loss. In one case,
we can make up for it by adding the pg_noreturn to a wrapper function
and adding a pg_unreachable(), in the other case, the latter was
already done before.
Reviewed-by: Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker <ilmari@ilmari.org>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/pxr5b3z7jmkpenssra5zroxi7qzzp6eswuggokw64axmdixpnk@zbwxuq7gbbcw
When pulling up a subquery, if the subquery's target list items are
used in grouping set columns, we need to wrap them in PlaceHolderVars.
This ensures that expressions retain their separate identity so that
they will match grouping set columns when appropriate.
In 90947674f, we decided to wrap subquery outputs that are non-var
expressions in PlaceHolderVars. This prevents const-simplification
from merging them into the surrounding expressions after subquery
pullup, which could otherwise lead to failing to match those
subexpressions to grouping set columns, with the effect that they'd
not go to null when expected.
However, that left some loose ends. If the subquery's target list
contains two or more identical Var expressions, we can still fail to
match the Var expression to the expected grouping set expression.
This is not related to const-simplification, but rather to how we
match expressions to lower target items in setrefs.c.
For sort/group expressions, we use ressortgroupref matching, which
works well. For other expressions, we primarily rely on comparing the
expressions to determine if they are the same. Therefore, we need a
way to prevent setrefs.c from matching the expression to some other
identical ones.
To fix, wrap all subquery outputs in PlaceHolderVars if the parent
query uses grouping sets, ensuring that they preserve their separate
identity throughout the whole planning process.
Reported-by: Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com>
Author: Richard Guo <guofenglinux@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMbWs4-meSahaanKskpBn0KKxdHAXC1_EJCVWHxEodqirrGJnw@mail.gmail.com
In pull_up_simple_subquery and pull_up_constant_function, there is
code that sets wrap_non_vars to true when dealing with an appendrel
member. The goal is to wrap subquery outputs that are not simple Vars
in PlaceHolderVars, ensuring that what we pull up doesn't get merged
into a surrounding expression during later processing, which could
cause it to fail to match the expression actually available from the
appendrel.
However, this is unnecessary. When pulling up an appendrel child
subquery, the only part of the upper query that could reference the
appendrel child yet is the translated_vars list of the associated
AppendRelInfo that we just made for this child. Furthermore, we do
not want to force use of PHVs in the AppendRelInfo, as there is no
outer join between. In fact, perform_pullup_replace_vars always sets
wrap_non_vars to false before performing pullup_replace_vars on the
AppendRelInfo.
This patch simply removes the code that sets wrap_non_vars to true for
UNION ALL subqueries.
Author: Richard Guo <guofenglinux@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMbWs4-VXDEi1v+hZYLxpOv0riJxHsCkCH1f46tLnhonEAyGCQ@mail.gmail.com
On Publication rename, we need to only invalidate the RelationSyncCache
entries corresponding to relations that are part of the publication being
renamed.
As part of this patch, we introduce a new invalidation message to
invalidate the cache maintained by the logical decoding output plugin. We
can't use existing relcache invalidation for this purpose, as that would
unnecessarily cause relcache invalidations in other backends.
This will improve performance by building fewer relation cache entries
during logical replication.
Author: Hayato Kuroda <kuroda.hayato@fujitsu.com>
Author: Shlok Kyal <shlok.kyal.oss@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Hou Zhijie <houzj.fnst@fujitsu.com>
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/OSCPR01MB14966C09AA201EFFA706576A7F5C92@OSCPR01MB14966.jpnprd01.prod.outlook.com
In a couple of places, read_stream.c assumed that io_combine_limit would
be stable during the lifetime of a stream. That is not true in at least
one unusual case: streams held by CURSORs where you could change the GUC
between FETCH commands, with unpredictable results.
Fix, by storing stream->io_combine_limit and referring only to that
after construction. This mirrors the treatment of the other important
setting {effective,maintenance}_io_concurrency, which is stored in
stream->max_ios.
One of the cases was the queue overflow space, which was sized for
io_combine_limit and could be overrun if the GUC was increased. Since
that coding was a little hard to follow, also introduce a variable for
better readability instead of open-coding the arithmetic. Doing so
revealed an off-by-one thinko while clamping max_pinned_buffers to
INT16_MAX, though that wasn't a live bug due to the current limits on
GUC values.
Back-patch to 17.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKG%2B2T9p-%2BzM6Eeou-RAJjTML6eit1qn26f9twznX59qtCA%40mail.gmail.com
Commit 3c152a27b0 mistakenly repeated JSONTYPE_JSON in a condition,
omitting JSONTYPE_CAST. As a result, datum_to_jsonb_internal() failed
to reject inputs that were casts (e.g., from an enum to json as in the
example below) when used as keys in JSON constructors.
This led to a crash in cases like:
SELECT JSON_OBJECT('happy'::mood: '123'::jsonb);
where 'happy'::mood is implicitly cast to json. The missing check
meant such casted values weren’t properly rejected as invalid
(non-scalar) JSON keys.
Reported-by: Maciek Sakrejda <maciek@pganalyze.com>
Reviewed-by: Tender Wang <tndrwang@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
Reviewed-by: Maciek Sakrejda <maciek@pganalyze.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CADXhmgTJtJZK9A3Na_ry+Xrq-ghjcejBRhcRMzWZvbd__QdgJA@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 17
There used to be bespoken pools for these structs to reduce the
palloc/pfree overhead, but that was ripped out a long time ago and
replaced with the generic, cheaper generational memory allocator
(commit a4ccc1cef5). The Get/Return terminology made sense with the
pools, as you "got" an object from the pool and "returned" it later,
but now it just looks weird. Rename to Alloc/Free.
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/c9e43d2d-8e83-444f-b111-430377368989@iki.fi
The only caller, select_best_grantor(), can instead use
pg_popcount64(). This isn't performance-critical code, but we
might as well use the centralized implementation. While at it, add
some test coverage for this part of select_best_grantor().
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Z9GtL7Nm6hsYyJnF%40nathan
We did not wake up on interrupts while waiting on async events on an
async-capable append node. For example, if you tried to cancel the
query, nothing would happen until one of the async subplans becomes
readable. To fix, add WL_LATCH_SET to the WaitEventSet.
Backpatch down to v14 where async Append execution was introduced.
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/37a40570-f558-40d3-b5ea-5c2079b3b30b@iki.fi
makeWholeRowVar() has different rules for constructing a
whole-row Var depending on the kind of RTE it's representing.
This turns out to be problematic because the rewriter and planner
can convert view RTEs and set-returning-function RTEs into
subquery RTEs; so a whole-row Var made during planning might
look different from one made by the parser. In isolation this
doesn't cause any problem, but if a query contains Vars made
both ways for the same varno, there are cross-checks in the
executor that will complain. This manifests for UPDATE, DELETE,
and MERGE queries that use whole-row table references.
To fix, we need makeWholeRowVar() to produce the same result
from an inlined RTE as it would have for the original. For
an inlined view, we can use RangeTblEntry.relid to detect
that this had been a view RTE. For inlined SRFs, make a
data structure definition change akin to commit 47bb9db75,
and say that we won't clear RangeTblEntry.functions until
the end of planning. That allows makeWholeRowVar() to
repeat what it would have done with the unmodified RTE.
Reported-by: Duncan Sands <duncan.sands@deepbluecap.com>
Reported-by: Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com>
Diagnosed-by: Tender Wang <tndrwang@gmail.com>
Author: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Reviewed-by: Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3518c50a-ab18-482f-b916-a37263622501@deepbluecap.com
Backpatch-through: 13
Add log_connections option 'setup_durations' which logs durations of
several key parts of connection establishment and backend setup.
For an incoming connection, starting from when the postmaster gets a
socket from accept() and ending when the forked child backend is first
ready for query, there are multiple steps that could each take longer
than expected due to external factors. This logging provides visibility
into authentication and fork duration as well as the end-to-end
connection establishment and backend initialization time.
To make this portable, the timings captured in the postmaster (socket
creation time, fork initiation time) are passed through the
BackendStartupData.
Author: Melanie Plageman <melanieplageman@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Bertrand Drouvot <bertranddrouvot.pg@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@oss.nttdata.com>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
Reviewed-by: Jacob Champion <jacob.champion@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: Jelte Fennema-Nio <postgres@jeltef.nl>
Reviewed-by: Guillaume Lelarge <guillaume.lelarge@dalibo.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/flat/CAAKRu_b_smAHK0ZjrnL5GRxnAVWujEXQWpLXYzGbmpcZd3nLYw%40mail.gmail.com
Convert the boolean log_connections GUC into a list GUC comprised of the
connection aspects to log.
This gives users more control over the volume and kind of connection
logging.
The current log_connections options are 'receipt', 'authentication', and
'authorization'. The empty string disables all connection logging. 'all'
enables all available connection logging.
For backwards compatibility, the most common values for the
log_connections boolean are still supported (on, off, 1, 0, true, false,
yes, no). Note that previously supported substrings of on, off, true,
false, yes, and no are no longer supported.
Author: Melanie Plageman <melanieplageman@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Bertrand Drouvot <bertranddrouvot.pg@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@oss.nttdata.com>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/flat/CAAKRu_b_smAHK0ZjrnL5GRxnAVWujEXQWpLXYzGbmpcZd3nLYw%40mail.gmail.com
9a8dd2c5a6 has added an initialization to PendingBackendStats, which
has been causing compilation warnings in the buildfarm. This code does
not strictly require it as PendingBackendStats is always initialized
with memset(0), so let's remove it.
Per report from multiple buildfarm members, like ayu and batfish, via
Tom Lane.
Author: Bertrand Drouvot <bertranddrouvot.pg@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1870853.1741749264@sss.pgh.pa.us
The comment in GetTransactionSnapshot() said that you "should call
RegisterSnapshot or PushActiveSnapshot on the returned snap if it is
to be used very long". That felt too unclear to me. Make the comment
more strongly worded.
To enforce that rule and to catch potential bugs where a snapshot
might get invalidated while it's still in use, add an assertion to
HeapTupleSatisfiesMVCC() to check that the snapshot is registered or
pushed to active stack. No new bugs were found by this, but it seems
like good future-proofing. It's not a great place for the check;
HeapTupleSatisfiesMVCC() is in fact safe to call with an unregistered
snapshot, and the assertion won't catch other unsafe uses. But it goes
a long way in practice.
Fix a few cases that were playing fast and loose with that and just
assumed that the snapshot cannot be invalidated during a scan. Those
assumptions were not wrong, but they're not performance critical, so
let's drop the excuses and just register the snapshot. These were
false positives found by the new assertion.
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/7c56f180-b9e1-481e-8c1d-efa63de3ecbb@iki.fi
Previously, pg_logicalinspect functions were too trusting of their
input and blindly passed it to SnapBuildRestoreSnapshot(). If the
input pointed to a directory, the server could a PANIC error while
attempting to fsync_fname() with isdir=false on a directory.
This commit adds validation checks for input filenames and passes the
LSN extracted from the filename to SnapBuildRestoreSnapshot() instead
of the filename itself. It also adds regression tests for various
input patterns and permission checks.
Bug: #18828
Reported-by: Robins Tharakan <tharakan@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Bertrand Drouvot <bertranddrouvot.pg@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18828-0f4701c635064211@postgresql.org
Up to now we just punted on showing the window definitions used
in a plan, with window function calls represented as "OVER (?)".
To improve that, show the window definition implemented by each
WindowAgg plan node, and reference their window names in OVER.
For nameless window clauses generated by "OVER (...)", assign
unique names w1, w2, etc.
In passing, re-order the properties shown for a WindowAgg node
so that the Run Condition (if any) appears after the Window
property and before the Filter (if any). This seems more
sensible since the Run Condition is associated with the Window
and acts before the Filter.
Thanks to David G. Johnston and Álvaro Herrera for design
suggestions.
Author: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Reviewed-by: David Rowley <dgrowleyml@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/144530.1741469955@sss.pgh.pa.us
Make nbtree's "1/3 of a page limit" BTMaxItemSize function-like macro
(which accepts a "page" argument) into an object-like macro that can be
used from code that doesn't have convenient access to an nbtree page.
Preparation for an upcoming patch that adds skip scan to nbtree.
Parallel index scans that use skip scan will serialize datums (not just
SAOP array subscripts) when scheduling primitive scans. BTMaxItemSize
will be used by btestimateparallelscan to determine how much DSM to
request.
Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-Wz=H_RG5weNGeUG_TkK87tRBnH9mGCQj6WpM4V4FNWKv2g@mail.gmail.com
Expose the count of index searches/index descents in EXPLAIN ANALYZE's
output for index scan/index-only scan/bitmap index scan nodes. This
information is particularly useful with scans that use ScalarArrayOp
quals, where the number of index searches can be unpredictable due to
implementation details that interact with physical index characteristics
(at least with nbtree SAOP scans, since Postgres 17 commit 5bf748b8).
The information shown also provides useful context when EXPLAIN ANALYZE
runs a plan with an index scan node that successfully applied the skip
scan optimization (set to be added to nbtree by an upcoming patch).
The instrumentation works by teaching all index AMs to increment a new
nsearches counter whenever a new index search begins. The counter is
incremented at exactly the same point that index AMs already increment
the pg_stat_*_indexes.idx_scan counter (we're counting the same event,
but at the scan level rather than the relation level). Parallel queries
have workers copy their local counter struct into shared memory when an
index scan node ends -- even when it isn't a parallel aware scan node.
An earlier version of this patch that only worked with parallel aware
scans became commit 5ead85fb (though that was quickly reverted by commit
d00107cd following "debug_parallel_query=regress" buildfarm failures).
Our approach doesn't match the approach used when tracking other index
scan related costs (e.g., "Rows Removed by Filter:"). It is comparable
to the approach used in similar cases involving costs that are only
readily accessible inside an access method, not from the executor proper
(e.g., "Heap Blocks:" output for a Bitmap Heap Scan, which was recently
enhanced to show per-worker costs by commit 5a1e6df3, using essentially
the same scheme as the one used here). It is necessary for index AMs to
have direct responsibility for maintaining the new counter, since the
counter might need to be incremented multiple times per amgettuple call
(or per amgetbitmap call). But it is also necessary for the executor
proper to manage the shared memory now used to transfer each worker's
counter struct to the leader.
Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Reviewed-By: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Tomas Vondra <tomas@vondra.me>
Reviewed-By: Masahiro Ikeda <ikedamsh@oss.nttdata.com>
Reviewed-By: Matthias van de Meent <boekewurm+postgres@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzkRqvaqR2CTNqTZP0z6FuL4-3ED6eQB0yx38XBNj1v-4Q@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-Wz=PKR6rB7qbx+Vnd7eqeB5VTcrW=iJvAsTsKbdG+kW_UA@mail.gmail.com
With improperly defined operator classes, it's possible to get a
Postgres crash because we'd try to invoke a procedure that doesn't
exist. This is because the code is being a bit too trusting that the
opclass is correctly defined. Add some ereport(ERROR)s for cases where
mandatory support procedures are not defined, transforming the crashes
into errors.
The particular case that was reported is an incomplete opclass in
PostGIS.
Backpatch all the way down to 13.
Reported-by: Tobias Wendorff <tobias.wendorff@tu-dortmund.de>
Diagnosed-by: David Rowley <dgrowleyml@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra <tomas@vondra.me>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/fb6d9a35-6c8e-4869-af80-0a4944a793a4@tu-dortmund.de
Many STRICT function calls will have one or two arguments, in which
case we can speed up checking for NULL input by avoiding setting up
a loop over the arguments. This adds EEOP_FUNCEXPR_STRICT_1 and the
corresponding EEOP_FUNCEXPR_STRICT_2 for functions with one and two
arguments respectively.
Author: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Co-authored-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
Reviewed-by: Andreas Karlsson <andreas@proxel.se>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/415721CE-7D2E-4B74-B5D9-1950083BA03E@yesql.se
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20191023163849.sosqbfs5yenocez3@alap3.anarazel.de
Knowing when the side-effects of an expression is the intended result
of the execution, rather than the returnvalue, is important for being
able generate more efficient JITed code. This replaces EEOP_DONE with
two new steps: EEOP_DONE_RETURN and EEOP_DONE_NO_RETURN. Expressions
which return a value should use the former step; expressions used for
their side-effects which don't return value should use the latter.
Author: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Co-authored-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
Reviewed-by: Andreas Karlsson <andreas@proxel.se>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/415721CE-7D2E-4B74-B5D9-1950083BA03E@yesql.se
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20191023163849.sosqbfs5yenocez3@alap3.anarazel.de
This change is harmless and does not affect the existing intended
operation. It is necessary for a subsequent patch operation (NOT
ENFORCED foreign keys), where we may need to change the child
constraint to enforced. In this case, we would create the necessary
triggers and queue the constraint for validation, so it is important
to remove any unnecessary constraints before proceeding.
This is a small change that could have been included in the previous
"split tryAttachPartitionForeignKey" refactoring patch (commit
1d26c2d2c4), but was kept separate to highlight the changes.
Author: Amul Sul <amul.sul@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexandra Wang <alexandra.wang.oss@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CAAJ_b962c5AcYW9KUt_R_ER5qs3fUGbe4az-SP-vuwPS-w-AGA%40mail.gmail.com
Split tryAttachPartitionForeignKey() into three functions:
AttachPartitionForeignKey(), RemoveInheritedConstraint(), and
DropForeignKeyConstraintTriggers(), so they can be reused in some
subsequent patches for the NOT ENFORCED feature.
Author: Amul Sul <amul.sul@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexandra Wang <alexandra.wang.oss@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CAAJ_b962c5AcYW9KUt_R_ER5qs3fUGbe4az-SP-vuwPS-w-AGA%40mail.gmail.com
This commit adds per-backend WAL statistics, providing the same
information as pg_stat_wal, except that it is now possible to know how
much WAL activity is happening in each backend rather than an overall
aggregate of all the activity. Like pg_stat_wal, the implementation
relies on pgWalUsage, tracking the difference of activity between two
reports to pgstats.
This data can be retrieved with a new system function called
pg_stat_get_backend_wal(), that returns one tuple based on the PID
provided in input. Like pg_stat_get_backend_io(), this is useful when
joined with pg_stat_activity to get a live picture of the WAL generated
for each running backend, showing how the activity is [un]balanced.
pgstat_flush_backend() gains a new flag value, able to control the flush
of the WAL stats.
This commit relies mostly on the infrastructure provided by
9aea73fc61, that has introduced backend statistics.
Bump catalog version. A bump of PGSTAT_FILE_FORMAT_ID is not required,
as backend stats do not persist on disk.
Author: Bertrand Drouvot <bertranddrouvot.pg@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Reviewed-by: Nazir Bilal Yavuz <byavuz81@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Xuneng Zhou <xunengzhou@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Z3zqc4o09dM/Ezyz@ip-10-97-1-34.eu-west-3.compute.internal
This fixes a thinko from commit d611f8b15. The intent was to prevent
updating the stats of the pre-existing heap if autovacuum is off,
but it also disabled updating the stats of the just-created index.
There is AFAICS no good reason to do the latter, since there could not
be any pre-existing stats to refrain from overwriting, and the zeroed
stats that are there to begin with are very unlikely to be useful.
Moreover, the change broke our cross-version upgrade tests again.
Author: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1116282.1741374848@sss.pgh.pa.us
The function calls GetLatestSnapshot() to acquire a fresh snapshot,
makes it active, and was meant to pass it to table_tuple_lock(), but
instead called GetLatestSnapshot() again to acquire yet another
snapshot. It was harmless because the heap AM and all other known
table AMs ignore the 'snapshot' argument anyway, but let's be tidy.
In the long run, this perhaps should be redesigned so that snapshot
was not needed in the first place. The table AM API uses TID +
snapshot as the unique identifier for the row version, which is
questionable when the row came from an index scan with a Dirty
snapshot. You might lock a different row version when you use a
different snapshot in the table_tuple_lock() call (a fresh MVCC
snapshot) than in the index scan (DirtySnapshot). However, in the heap
AM and other AMs where the TID alone identifies the row version, it
doesn't matter. So for now, just fix the obvious albeit harmless bug.
This has been wrong ever since the table AM API was introduced in
commit 5db6df0c01, so backpatch to all supported versions.
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/83d243d6-ad8d-4307-8b51-2ee5844f6230@iki.fi
Backpatch-through: 13
Recognizing the real-life complexity where columns in the table often have
functional dependencies, PostgreSQL's estimation of the number of distinct
values over a set of columns can be underestimated (or much rarely,
overestimated) when dealing with multi-clause JOIN. In the case of hash
join, it can end up with a small number of predicted hash buckets and, as
a result, picking non-optimal merge join.
To improve the situation, we introduce one additional stage of bucket size
estimation - having two or more join clauses estimator lookup for extended
statistics and use it for multicolumn estimation. Clauses are grouped into
lists, each containing expressions referencing the same relation. The result
of the multicolumn estimation made over such a list is combined with others
according to the caller's logic. Clauses that are not estimated are returned
to the caller for further estimation.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/52257607-57f6-850d-399a-ec33a654457b%40postgrespro.ru
Author: Andrei Lepikhov <lepihov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Andy Fan <zhihui.fan1213@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: Alena Rybakina <lena.ribackina@yandex.ru>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Korotkov <aekorotkov@gmail.com>
This change is dedicated to more active usage of IndexScan and parameterized
NestLoop paths in partitioned cases under an Append node, as it already works
with plain tables. As newly added regression tests demonstrate, it should
provide more smartness to the partitionwise technique.
With an indication of how many tuples are needed, it may be more meaningful
to use the 'fractional branch' subpaths of the Append path list, which are
more optimal for this specific number of tuples. Planning on a higher level,
if the optimizer needs all the tuples, it will choose non-fractional paths.
In the case when, during execution, Append needs to return fewer tuples than
declared by tuple_fraction, it would not be harmful to use the 'intermediate'
variant of paths. However, it will earn a considerable profit if a sensible
set of tuples is selected.
The change of the existing regression test demonstrates the positive outcome
of this feature: instead of scanning the whole table, the optimizer prefers
to use a parameterized scan, being aware of the only single tuple the join
has to produce to perform the query.
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CAN-LCVPxnWB39CUBTgOQ9O7Dd8DrA_tpT1EY3LNVnUuvAX1NjA%40mail.gmail.com
Author: Nikita Malakhov <hukutoc@gmail.com>
Author: Andrei Lepikhov <lepihov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Andy Fan <zhihuifan1213@163.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Korotkov <aekorotkov@gmail.com>
It isn't clear how these should behave, so let's wait to implement them
until we are sure how to do it.
This feature was initially added by commit 89f908a6d0, so it hasn't
been released yet.
Author: Paul A. Jungwirth <pj@illuminatedcomputing.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/e773bc11-4ac1-40de-bb91-814e02f05b6d%40eisentraut.org
This doesn't work because record_recv requires the typmod that
identifies the specific record type (in our session) and
array_agg_deserialize has no convenient way to get that information.
The result is an "input of anonymous composite types is not
implemented" error.
We could probably make this work if we had to, but it does not seem
worth the trouble, given that it took this long to get a field report.
Just shut off parallelization, as though record_recv didn't exist.
Oversight in commit 16fd03e95. Back-patch to v16 where that
came in.
Reported-by: Kirill Zdornyy <kirill@dineserve.com>
Diagnosed-by: Richard Guo <guofenglinux@gmail.com>
Author: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Reviewed-by: David Rowley <dgrowleyml@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/atLI5Kce2ie1zcYjU0w_kjtVaxiYbYGTihrkLDmGZQnRDD4pnXukIATaABbnIj9pUnelC4ESvCXMm4HAyHg-v61XABaKpERj0A2IXzJZM7g=@dineserve.com
Backpatch-through: 16
Per POSIX, a caller of strtol() that wishes to check for errors must
set errno to 0 beforehand. Several places in spell.c neglected that,
so that they risked delivering a false overflow error in case errno
had been ERANGE already. Given the lack of field reports, this case
may be unreachable at present --- but it's surely trouble waiting to
happen, so fix it.
Author: Jacob Brazeal <jacob.brazeal@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+COZaBhsq6EromFm+knMJfzK6nTpG23zJ+K2=nfUQQXcj_xcQ@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 13
Teach parallel nbtree index scans to use an LWLock (not a spinlock) to
protect the scan's shared descriptor state.
Preparation for an upcoming patch that will add skip scan optimizations
to nbtree. That patch will create the need to occasionally allocate
memory while the scan descriptor is locked, while copying datums that
were serialized by another backend.
Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Reviewed-By: Matthias van de Meent <boekewurm+postgres@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-Wz=PKR6rB7qbx+Vnd7eqeB5VTcrW=iJvAsTsKbdG+kW_UA@mail.gmail.com
The callback pgstat_backend_have_pending_cb() is used as a way for
pg_stat_report() to detect if there is any pending data for backend
statistics.
It did not include a check based on pgstat_tracks_backend_bktype(), that
discards processes whose backend types do not support backend
statistics. The logic is not a problem on HEAD, as processes that do
not support backend statistics cannot touch PendingBackendStats, so the
callback would always report that there is no pending data in this case.
However, we would run into trouble once backend statistics include
portions of pending stats that are not always zeroed, like pgWalUsage.
There is no reason for pgstat_backend_have_pending_cb() to not check
for pgstat_tracks_backend_bktype(), anyway, and this pattern is safer in
the long run, so let's update the code to do so.
While on it, this commit adds a proper initialization to
PendingBackendStats.
Author: Bertrand Drouvot <bertranddrouvot.pg@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Z8l6EMM4ImVoWRkg@ip-10-97-1-34.eu-west-3.compute.internal
Formerly we only provided the column number, but it's frequently
more useful to mention the column name. The input tupdesc often
doesn't have useful column names, but the output tupdesc usually
contains user-supplied names, so report that one.
Author: Marcos Pegoraro <marcos@f10.com.br>
Co-authored-by: jian he <jian.universality@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Co-authored-by: Erik Wienhold <ewie@ewie.name>
Reviewed-by: Vladlen Popolitov <v.popolitov@postgrespro.ru>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB-JLwanky28gjAMdnMh1CjyO1b2zLdr6UOA1-oY9G7PVL9KKQ@mail.gmail.com
Commit ce62f2f2a0 introduced calls to GetIndexAmRoutineByAmId() in
lsyscache.c functions. This call is a bit more expensive than a
simple syscache lookup. So rearrange the nesting so that we call that
one last and do the cheaper checks first.
Reported-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/E1tngY6-0000UL-2n%40gemulon.postgresql.org
After more discussion about commit ce62f2f2a0, rename the index AM
property amcancrosscompare to two separate properties
amconsistentequality and amconsistentordering. Also improve the
documentation and update some comments that were previously missed.
Reported-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/E1tngY6-0000UL-2n%40gemulon.postgresql.org
This allows smallint, integer, and bigint values to be cast to and
from bytea. The bytea value is the two's complement representation of
the integer, with the most significant byte first. For example:
1234::bytea -> \x000004d2
(-1234)::bytea -> \xfffffb2e
Author: Aleksander Alekseev <aleksander@timescale.com>
Reviewed-by: Joel Jacobson <joel@compiler.org>
Reviewed-by: Yugo Nagata <nagata@sraoss.co.jp>
Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut <peter@eisentraut.org>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Reviewed-by: Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJ7c6TPtOp6%2BkFX5QX3fH1SVr7v65uHr-7yEJ%3DGMGQi5uhGtcA%40mail.gmail.com
We previously fixed this for binary upgrade in 71b66171d0, but a
similar problem remained when dumping statistics without data.
Fix by not opportunistically updating table stats during CREATE INDEX
when autovacuum is disabled. For stats to be stable at all, the server
needs to be aware that it should not take every opportunity to update
stats. Per discussion, autovacuum=off is a signal that the user
expects stats to be stable; though if necessary, we could create
a more specific mode in the future.
Reported-by: Ashutosh Bapat <ashutosh.bapat.oss@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAExHW5vf9D+8-a5_BEX3y=2y_xY9hiCxV1=C+FnxDvfprWvkng@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ca81cbf6e6ea2af838df972801ad4da52640a503.camel%40j-davis.com
If a GIN index search had a lot of search keys (for example,
"jsonbcol ?| array[]" with tens of thousands of array elements),
both ginFillScanKey() and startScanKey() took O(N^2) time.
Worse, those loops were uncancelable for lack of CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS.
The problem in ginFillScanKey() is the brute-force search key
de-duplication done in ginFillScanEntry(). The most expedient
solution seems to be to just stop trying to de-duplicate once
there are "too many" search keys. We could imagine working harder,
say by using a sort-and-unique algorithm instead of brute force
compare-all-the-keys. But it seems unlikely to be worth the trouble.
There is no correctness issue here, since the code already allowed
duplicate keys if any extra_data is present.
The problem in startScanKey() is the loop that attempts to identify
the first non-required search key. In the submitted test case, that
vainly tests all the key positions, and each iteration takes O(N)
time. One part of that is that it's reinitializing the entryRes[]
array from scratch each time, which is entirely unnecessary given
that the triConsistentFn isn't supposed to scribble on its input.
We can easily adjust the array contents incrementally instead.
The other part of it is that the triConsistentFn may itself take
O(N) time (and does in this test case). This is all extremely
brute force: in simple cases with AND or OR semantics, we could
know without any looping whatever that all or none of the keys
are required. But GIN opclasses don't have any API for exposing
that knowledge, so at least in the short run there is little to
be done about that. Put in a CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS so that at
least the loop is cancelable.
These two changes together resolve the primary complaint that
the test query doesn't respond promptly to cancel interrupts.
Also, while they don't completely eliminate the O(N^2) behavior,
they do provide quite a nice speedup for mid-sized examples.
Bug: #18831
Reported-by: Niek <niek.brasa@hitachienergy.com>
Author: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18831-e845ac44ebc5dd36@postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 13
On change of publication via ALTER PUBLICATION ... SET/ADD/DROP commands,
we were invalidating all the relations present in relation sync cache
maintained by pgoutput. We need to invalidate only the relation entries
that are changed as part of publication DDL.
We have ensured that the publication DDL execution generated the
invalidations required to invalidate impacted relation sync entries in
RelationSyncCache.
This improves the performance by avoiding building the cache entries for
the cases where a publication has many tables but only one of them is
dropped.
Author: Shlok Kyal <shlok.kyal.oss@gmail.com>
Author: Hayato Kuroda <kuroda.hayato@fujitsu.com>
Reviewed-by: Hou Zhijie <houzj.fnst@fujitsu.com>
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/OSCPR01MB14966C09AA201EFFA706576A7F5C92@OSCPR01MB14966.jpnprd01.prod.outlook.com
This commit adds two improvements related to the monitoring of WAL
writes for the WAL receiver.
First, write counts and timings are now counted in pg_stat_io for the
WAL receiver. These have been discarded from pg_stat_wal in
ff99918c62 due to performance concerns, related to the fact that we
still relied on an on-disk file for the stats back then, even with
track_wal_io_timing to avoid the overhead of the timestamp calculations.
This implementation is simpler than the original proposal as it is
possible to rely on the APIs of pgstat_io.c to do the job. Like the
fsync and read data, track_wal_io_timing needs to be enabled to track
the timings.
Second, a wait event is added around the pg_pwrite() call in charge of
the writes, using the exiting WAIT_EVENT_WAL_WRITE. This is useful as
the WAL receiver data is tracked in pg_stat_activity.
Reviewed-by: Bertrand Drouvot <bertranddrouvot.pg@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Z8gFnH4o3jBm5BRz@ip-10-97-1-34.eu-west-3.compute.internal
This is in preparation for splitting WaitEventSet related functions to
a separate source file. That will hide the details of WaitEventSet
from WaitLatch, so it must use an exposed function instead of
modifying WaitEventSet->exit_on_postmaster_death directly.
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/8a507fb6-df28-49d3-81a5-ede180d7f0fb@iki.fi
This reverts commit 5ead85fbc8.
This commit shows test failures with debug_parallel_query=regress. The
underlying issue needs to be debugged, so revert for now.
An additional paramater ("strip_in_arrays") is added to these functions.
It defaults to false. If true, then null array elements are removed as
well as null valued object fields. JSON that just consists of a single
null is not affected.
Author: Florents Tselai <florents.tselai@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4BCECCD5-4F40-4313-9E98-9E16BEB0B01D@gmail.com
Expose the count of index searches/index descents in EXPLAIN ANALYZE's
output for index scan nodes. This information is particularly useful
with scans that use ScalarArrayOp quals, where the number of index scans
isn't predictable in advance (at least not with optimizations like the
one added to nbtree by Postgres 17 commit 5bf748b8). It will also be
useful when EXPLAIN ANALYZE shows details of an nbtree index scan that
uses skip scan optimizations set to be introduced by an upcoming patch.
The instrumentation works by teaching index AMs to increment a new
nsearches counter whenever a new index search begins. The counter is
incremented at exactly the same point that index AMs must already
increment the index's pg_stat_*_indexes.idx_scan counter (we're counting
the same event, but at the scan level rather than the relation level).
The new counter is stored in the scan descriptor (IndexScanDescData),
which explain.c reaches by going through the scan node's PlanState.
This approach doesn't match the approach used when tracking other index
scan specific costs (e.g., "Rows Removed by Filter:"). It is similar to
the approach used in other cases where we must track costs that are only
readily accessible inside an access method, and not from the executor
(e.g., "Heap Blocks:" output for a Bitmap Heap Scan). It is inherently
necessary to maintain a counter that can be incremented multiple times
during a single amgettuple call (or amgetbitmap call), and directly
exposing PlanState.instrument to index access methods seems unappealing.
Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Reviewed-By: Tomas Vondra <tomas@vondra.me>
Reviewed-By: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Masahiro Ikeda <ikedamsh@oss.nttdata.com>
Reviewed-By: Matthias van de Meent <boekewurm+postgres@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-Wz=PKR6rB7qbx+Vnd7eqeB5VTcrW=iJvAsTsKbdG+kW_UA@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzkRqvaqR2CTNqTZP0z6FuL4-3ED6eQB0yx38XBNj1v-4Q@mail.gmail.com
The usual pattern for handling a signal is that the signal handler
sets a flag and calls SetLatch(MyLatch), and CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() or
other code that is part of a wait loop calls another function to deal
with it. The naming of the functions involved was a bit inconsistent,
however. CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() calls ProcessInterrupts() to do the
heavy-lifting, but the analogous functions in aux processes were
called HandleMainLoopInterrupts(), HandleStartupProcInterrupts(),
etc. Similarly, most subroutines of ProcessInterrupts() were called
Process*(), but some were called Handle*().
To make things less confusing, rename all the functions that are part
of the overall signal/interrupt handling system but are not executed
in a signal handler to e.g. ProcessSomething(), rather than
HandleSomething(). The "Process" prefix is now consistently used in
the non-signal-handler functions, and the "Handle" prefix in functions
that are part of signal handlers, except for some completely unrelated
functions that clearly have nothing to do with signal or interrupt
handling.
Reviewed-by: Nathan Bossart <nathandbossart@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/8a384b26-1499-41f6-be33-64b801fb98b8@iki.fi
This allows to redefine an existing non-inheritable constraint to be
inheritable, which allows to straighten up situations with NO INHERIT
constraints so that thay can become normal constraints without having to
re-verify existing data. For existing inheritance children this may
require creating additional constraints, if they don't exist already.
It also allows to do the opposite, if only for symmetry.
Author: Suraj Kharage <suraj.kharage@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: jian he <jian.universality@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAF1DzPVfOW6Kk=7SSh7LbneQDJWh=PbJrEC_Wkzc24tHOyQWGg@mail.gmail.com
The WAL receiver and WAL summarizer processes gain each one a call to
pgstat_report_wal(), to make sure that they report their WAL statistics
to pgstats, gathering data for pg_stat_io.
In the WAL receiver, the stats reports are timed with status updates sent
to the primary, that depend on wal_receiver_status_interval and
wal_receiver_timeout. This is a conservative choice, but perhaps we
could be more aggressive with the frequency of the stats reports. An
interesting historical fact is that the WAL receiver does writes and
syncs of WAL, but it has never reported its statistics to pgstats in
pg_stat_wal.
In the WAL summarizer, the stats reports are done each time the process
waits for WAL.
While on it, pg_stat_io is adjusted so as these two processes do not
report any rows when IOObject is not WAL, making the view easier to use
with less rows.
Two tests are added in TAP, checking statistics for the WAL summarizer
and the WAL receiver. Status updates in the WAL receiver are currently
possible in the recovery test 001_stream_rep.pl.
Reviewed-by: Bertrand Drouvot <bertranddrouvot.pg@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Z8UKZyVSHUUQJHNb@paquier.xyz
Index builds are expected to respect maintenance_work_mem, just like
other maintenance operations. For serial builds this is done simply by
flushing the buffer in ginBuildCallback() into the index. But with
parallel builds it's more complicated, because there are multiple places
that can allocate memory.
ginBuildCallbackParallel() does the same thing as ginBuildCallback(),
except that the accumulated items are written into tuplesort. Then the
entries with the same key get merged - first in the worker, then in the
leader - and the TID lists may get (arbitrarily) long. It's unlikely it
would exceed the memory limit, but it's possible. We address this by
evicting some of the data if the list gets too long.
We can't simply dump the whole in-memory TID list. The GIN index bulk
insert code expects to see TIDs in monotonic order; it may fail if the
TIDs go backwards. If the TID lists overlap, evicting the whole current
TID list would break this (a later entry might add "old" TID values into
the already-written part).
In the workers this is not an issue, because the lists never overlap.
But the leader may see overlapping lists produced by the workers.
We can however derive a safe "horizon" TID - the entries (for a given
key) are sorted by (key, first TID), which means no future list can add
values before the last "first TID" we've seen. This patch tracks the
"frozen" part of the TID list, which we know can't change by merging
additional TID lists. If needed, we can evict this part of the list.
We don't want to do this too often - the smaller lists we evict, the
more expensive it'll be to merge them in the next step (especially in
the leader). Therefore we only trim the list if we have at least 1024
frozen items, and if the whole list is at least 64kB large.
These thresholds are somewhat arbitrary and conservative. We might
calculate the values from maintenance_work_mem, but tests show that does
not really improve anything (time, compression ratio, ...). So we stick
to these conservative values to release memory faster.
Author: Tomas Vondra
Reviewed-by: Matthias van de Meent, Andy Fan, Kirill Reshke
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/6ab4003f-a8b8-4d75-a67f-f25ad98582dc%40enterprisedb.com
This bogus error message was introduced in 2013 by commit f177cbfe67,
because of misunderstanding the processCASbits() API; at the time, no
test cases were added that would be affected by this change. Only in
ca87c415e2 was one added (along with a couple of typos), with an XXX
note that the error message was bogus. Fix the whole, add some test
cases.
Backpatch all the way back.
Reviewed-by: Nathan Bossart <nathandbossart@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/202503041822.aobpqke3igvb@alvherre.pgsql
The change improves efficiency by eliminating unnecessary copying of
CopyFormatOptions.
The coverity also complained about inefficiencies caused by
pass-by-value.
Oversight in 7717f6300 and 2e4127b6d.
Reported-by: Junwang Zhao <zhjwpku@gmail.com>
Reported-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> (per reports from coverity)
Author: Sutou Kouhei <kou@clear-code.com>
Reviewed-by: Junwang Zhao <zhjwpku@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEG8a3L6YCpPksTQMzjD_CvwDEhW3D_t=5md9BvvdOs5k+TA=Q@mail.gmail.com
When serializing GIN tuples to tuplesorts during parallel index builds,
we can significantly reduce the amount of data by compressing the TID
lists. The GIN opclasses may produce a lot of data (depending on how
many keys are extracted from each row), and the TID compression is very
efficient and effective.
If the number of distinct keys is high, the first worker pass (reading
data from the table and writing them into a private tuplesort) may not
benefit from the compression very much. It is likely to spill data to
disk before the TID lists get long enough for the compression to help.
The second pass (writing the merged data into the shared tuplesort) is
more likely to benefit from compression.
The compression can be seen as a way to reduce the amount of disk space
needed by the parallel builds, because the data is written twice. First
into the per-worker tuplesorts, then into the shared tuplesort.
Author: Tomas Vondra
Reviewed-by: Matthias van de Meent, Andy Fan, Kirill Reshke
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/6ab4003f-a8b8-4d75-a67f-f25ad98582dc%40enterprisedb.com
The FP_LOCK_SLOTS_PER_BACKEND macro looks like a constant, but it
depends on the max_locks_per_transaction GUC, and thus can change. This
is non-obvious and confusing, so make it look more like a function by
renaming it to FastPathLockSlotsPerBackend().
While at it, use the macro when initializing fast-path shared memory,
instead of using the formula.
Reported-by: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ffiwtzc6vedo6wb4gbwelon5nefqg675t5c7an2ta7pcz646cg%40qwmkdb3l4ett
Commit bc971f4025 replaced the latch-setting mechanism that the
comment talked about with a condition variable. And before that,
commit 2258e76f90 moved the code so that the comment got detached from
the loop that it talked about, so move the comment closer to the loop.
demo:
CREATE TABLE gtest20a (a int PRIMARY KEY, b int GENERATED ALWAYS AS (a * 2) VIRTUAL);
ALTER TABLE gtest20a ADD COLUMN c float8 DEFAULT RANDOM() CHECK (b < 60);
ERROR: no generation expression found for column number 2 of table "pg_temp_17306"
In ATRewriteTable, the variable OIDNewHeap (if valid) corresponding
pg_attrdef default expression entry was not populated. So OIDNewHeap
cannot be used to call expand_generated_columns_in_expr or
build_generation_expression. Therefore in ATRewriteTable, we can only
use the existing relation to expand the generated expression.
Author: jian he <jian.universality@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Srinath Reddy <srinath2133@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CACJufxEJ%3DFoajabWXjszo_yrQeKSxdZ87KJqBW373rSbajKGAA%40mail.gmail.com
In commit b262ad440, we introduced an optimization that reduces an IS
NOT NULL qual on a column defined as NOT NULL to constant true, and an
IS NULL qual on a NOT NULL column to constant false, provided we can
prove that the input expression of the NullTest is not nullable by any
outer join. This deduction happens after we have generated multiple
clones of the same qual condition to cope with commuted-left-join
cases.
However, performing the NullTest deduction for clone clauses can be
unsafe, because we don't have a reliable way to determine if the input
expression of a NullTest is non-nullable: nullingrel bits in clone
clauses may not reflect reality, so we dare not draw conclusions from
clones about whether Vars are guaranteed not-null.
To fix, we check whether the given RestrictInfo is a clone clause in
restriction_is_always_true and restriction_is_always_false, and avoid
performing any reduction if it is.
There are several ensuing plan changes in predicate.out, and we have
to modify the tests to ensure that they continue to test what they are
intended to. Additionally, this fix causes the test case added in
f00ab1fd1 to no longer trigger the bug that commit fixed, so we also
remove that test case.
Back-patch to v17 where this bug crept in.
Reported-by: Ronald Cruz <cruz@rentec.com>
Diagnosed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Author: Richard Guo <guofenglinux@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f5320d3d-77af-4ce8-b9c3-4715ff33f213@rentec.com
Backpatch-through: 17
pgstat_bestart(), used post-authentication to set up a backend entry
in the PgBackendStatus array, so as its data becomes visible in
pg_stat_activity and related catalogs, has its logic divided into three
routines with this commit, called in order at different steps of the
backend initialization:
* pgstat_bestart_initial() sets up the backend entry with a minimal
amount of information, reporting it with a new BackendState called
STATE_STARTING while waiting for backend initialization and client
authentication to complete. The main benefit that this offers is
observability, so as it is possible to monitor the backend activity
during authentication. This step happens earlier than in the logic
prior to this commit. pgstat_beinit() happens earlier as well, before
authentication.
* pgstat_bestart_security() reports the SSL/GSS status of the
connection, once authentication completes. Auxiliary processes, for
example, do not need to call this step, hence it is optional. This
step is called after performing authentication, same as previously.
* pgstat_bestart_final() reports the user and database IDs, takes the
entry out of STATE_STARTING, and reports its application_name. This is
called as the last step of the three, once authentication completes.
An injection point is added, with a test checking that the "starting"
phase of a backend entry is visible in pg_stat_activity. Some follow-up
patches are planned to take advantage of this refactoring with more
information provided in backend entries during authentication (LDAP
hanging was a problem for the author, initially).
Author: Jacob Champion <jacob.champion@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAOYmi+=60deN20WDyCoHCiecgivJxr=98s7s7-C8SkXwrCfHXg@mail.gmail.com
palloc() includes an assertion checking that an alloc() implementation
never returns NULL for all MemoryContextMethods.
This commit adds a similar assertion in palloc0(). In palloc_extend(),
a different assertion is added, checking that MCXT_ALLOC_NO_OOM is set
when an alloc() routine returns NULL. These additions can be useful to
catch errors when implementing a new set of MemoryContextMethods
routines.
Author: Andreas Karlsson <andreas@proxel.se>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/507e8eba-2035-4a12-a777-98199a66beb8@proxel.se
Calculate the insert threshold for triggering an autovacuum of a
relation based on the number of unfrozen pages.
By only considering the unfrozen portion of the table when calculating
how many tuples to add to the insert threshold, we can trigger more
frequent vacuums of insert-heavy tables. This increases the chances of
vacuuming those pages when they still reside in shared buffers
This also increases the number of autovacuums triggered by tuples
inserted and not by wraparound risk. We prefer to freeze these pages
during insert-triggered autovacuums, as anti-wraparound vacuums are not
automatically canceled by conflicting lock requests.
We calculate the unfrozen percentage of the table using the recently
added (99f8f3fbbc) relallfrozen column of pg_class.
Author: Melanie Plageman <melanieplageman@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Nathan Bossart <nathandbossart@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Greg Sabino Mullane <htamfids@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Robert Treat <rob@xzilla.net>
Reviewed-by: wenhui qiu <qiuwenhuifx@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/flat/CAAKRu_aj-P7YyBz_cPNwztz6ohP%2BvWis%3Diz3YcomkB3NpYA--w%40mail.gmail.com
DefineRelation was of the opinion that it could usefully pre-fill
atthasdef flags to eliminate work for StoreAttrDefault. This is not
the case, however: the tupledesc that it's filling is not the one that
InsertPgAttributeTuples will work from. The tupledesc used there is
made by RelationBuildLocalRelation, which deliberately doesn't copy
atthasdef. Moreover, if this did happen as the code thinks, it would
be wrong for the case of plain "DEFAULT NULL" clauses, since we detect
and ignore simple-null-Const defaults later on. Hence, remove the
useless code.
It also emerges that it's not really worth a special-case path in
StoreAttrDefault() for atthasdef already being set, because as far as
we can see that never happens: cases where an existing default gets
updated always do RemoveAttrDefault first, so as to clean up
possibly-no-longer-correct dependency entries. If it were the case
the code would still work, anyway.
Also remove a nearby comment made moot by 5eaa0e92e.
Author: jian he <jian.universality@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CACJufxHFssPvkP1we7WMhPD_1kwgbG52o=kQgL+TnVoX5LOyCQ@mail.gmail.com
StoreAttrDefault() is no longer responsible for filling
attmissingval, so remove the code for that.
Get rid of RawColumnDefault.missingMode, too, as we no longer
need that to pass information around.
While here, clean up some sloppy coding in StoreAttrDefault(),
such as failure to use XXXGetDatum macros. These aren't bugs
but they're not good code either.
Reported-by: jian he <jian.universality@gmail.com>
Author: jian he <jian.universality@gmail.com>
Author: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CACJufxHFssPvkP1we7WMhPD_1kwgbG52o=kQgL+TnVoX5LOyCQ@mail.gmail.com
If a domain type has a default, adding a column of that type (without
any explicit DEFAULT clause) failed to install the domain's default
value in existing rows, instead leaving the new column null. This
is unexpected, and it used to work correctly before v11. The cause
is confusion in the atthasmissing mechanism about which default value
to install: we'd only consider installing an explicitly-specified
default, and then we'd decide that no table rewrite is needed.
To fix, take the responsibility for filling attmissingval out of
StoreAttrDefault, and instead put it into ATExecAddColumn's existing
logic that derives the correct value to fill the new column with.
Also, centralize the logic that determines the need for
default-related table rewriting there, instead of spreading it over
four or five places.
In the back branches, we'll leave the attmissingval-filling code
in StoreAttrDefault even though it's now dead, for fear that some
extension may be depending on that functionality to exist there.
A separate HEAD-only patch will clean up the now-useless code.
Reported-by: jian he <jian.universality@gmail.com>
Author: jian he <jian.universality@gmail.com>
Author: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CACJufxHFssPvkP1we7WMhPD_1kwgbG52o=kQgL+TnVoX5LOyCQ@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 13
Add relallfrozen, an estimate of the number of pages marked all-frozen
in the visibility map.
pg_class already has relallvisible, an estimate of the number of pages
in the relation marked all-visible in the visibility map. This is used
primarily for planning.
relallfrozen, together with relallvisible, is useful for estimating the
outstanding number of all-visible but not all-frozen pages in the
relation for the purposes of scheduling manual VACUUMs and tuning vacuum
freeze parameters.
A future commit will use relallfrozen to trigger more frequent vacuums
on insert-focused workloads with significant volume of frozen data.
Bump catalog version
Author: Melanie Plageman <melanieplageman@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Nathan Bossart <nathandbossart@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Robert Treat <rob@xzilla.net>
Reviewed-by: Corey Huinker <corey.huinker@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Greg Sabino Mullane <htamfids@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/flat/CAAKRu_aj-P7YyBz_cPNwztz6ohP%2BvWis%3Diz3YcomkB3NpYA--w%40mail.gmail.com
Allow using parallel workers to build a GIN index, similarly to BTREE
and BRIN. For large tables this may result in significant speedup when
the build is CPU-bound.
The work is divided so that each worker builds index entries on a subset
of the table, determined by the regular parallel scan used to read the
data. Each worker uses a local tuplesort to sort and merge the entries
for the same key. The TID lists do not overlap (for a given key), which
means the merge sort simply concatenates the two lists. The merged
entries are written into a shared tuplesort for the leader.
The leader needs to merge the sorted entries again, before writing them
into the index. But this way a significant part of the work happens in
the workers, and the leader is left with merging fewer large entries,
which is more efficient.
Most of the parallelism infrastructure is a simplified copy of the code
used by BTREE indexes, omitting the parts irrelevant for GIN indexes
(e.g. uniqueness checks).
Original patch by me, with reviews and substantial improvements by
Matthias van de Meent, certainly enough to make him a co-author.
Author: Tomas Vondra, Matthias van de Meent
Reviewed-by: Matthias van de Meent, Andy Fan, Kirill Reshke
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/6ab4003f-a8b8-4d75-a67f-f25ad98582dc%40enterprisedb.com
This commit impacts the following SQL functions, authorizing the access
to the PGPROC entries of auxiliary processes when attempting to fetch or
reset backend-level pgstats entries:
- pg_stat_reset_backend_stats()
- pg_stat_get_backend_io()
This is relevant since a051e71e28 for at least the WAL summarizer, WAL
receiver and WAL writer processes, that has changed the backend
statistics to authorize these three following the addition of WAL I/O
statistics in pg_stat_io and backend statistics. The code is more
flexible with future changes written this way, adapting automatically to
any updates done in pgstat_tracks_backend_bktype().
While on it, pgstat_report_wal() gains a call to pgstat_flush_backend(),
making sure that backend I/O statistics are updated when calling this
routine. This makes the statistics report correctly for the WAL writer.
WAL receiver and WAL summarizer do not call pgstat_report_wal() yet
(spoiler: both should). It should be possible to lift some of the
existing restrictions for other auxiliary processes, as well, but this
is left as future work.
Reported-by: Rahila Syed <rahilasyed90@gmail.com>
Author: Bertrand Drouvot <bertranddrouvot.pg@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2L28v9BwN8_y0k6FQ591=0g2Hj_esHLGj3bP38c9nmVykoiA@mail.gmail.com
Commit 7717f63006 removed NextCopyFromRawFields() from copy.h. While
it was hoped that NextCopyFrom() could serve as an alternative,
certain use cases still require NextCopyFromRawFields(). For instance,
extensions like file_text_array_fdw, which process source data with an
unknown number of columns, rely on this function.
Per buildfarm member crake.
Reported-by: Andrew Dunstan <andrew@dunslane.net>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Dunstan <andrew@dunslane.net>
Reviewed-by: Sutou Kouhei <kou@clear-code.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5c7e1ac8-5083-4c08-af19-cb9ade2f16ce@dunslane.net
This commit introduces a new CopyFromRoutine struct, which is a set of
callback routines to read tuples in a specific format. It also makes
COPY FROM with the existing formats (text, CSV, and binary) utilize
these format callbacks.
This change is a preliminary step towards making the COPY FROM command
extensible in terms of input formats.
Similar to 2e4127b6d2, this refactoring contributes to a performance
improvement by reducing the number of "if" branches that need to be
checked on a per-row basis when sending field representations in text
or CSV mode. The performance benchmark results showed ~5% performance
gain in text or CSV mode.
Author: Sutou Kouhei <kou@clear-code.com>
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: Junwang Zhao <zhjwpku@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20231204.153548.2126325458835528809.kou@clear-code.com
As per a suggestion from Tom Lane, we do this by declaring "struct
ExplainState" here and refer to that rather than "ExplainState".
Also per Tom, CreateExplainSerializeDestReceiver was still defined
in explain.h in addition to explain_dr.h. Remove leftover prototype.
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoYtaad3i21V0jqua-fbr+CR0ix6uBvEX8_s6BG96abd=g@mail.gmail.com
Commit ddb17e387a introduced this
regression. Ideally, the regression tests would have caught this
mistake, but apparently they don't test with timing enabled,
presumably because that would make the output vary.
Author: Thom Brown <thom@linux.com>
Reviewed-by: Fabrízio de Royes Mello <fabriziomello@gmail.com>
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAA-aLv6nq=UeiyvM7_Mxgo9TVBzs2oh46b9vfyLzuyVEz3j1-g@mail.gmail.com
This code is extracted from pg_stat_get_backend_io() in pgstatfuncs.c,
so as it can be shared with other areas that need backend pgstats
entries while having the benefits of the various sanity checks
refactored here. As per its name, this retrieves backend statistics
based on a PID, with the option of retrieving a BackendType if given in
input.
Currently, this is used for the backend-level IO statistics. The next
move would be to reuse that for the backend-level WAL statistics.
Author: Bertrand Drouvot <bertranddrouvot.pg@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Z3zqc4o09dM/Ezyz@ip-10-97-1-34.eu-west-3.compute.internal
This commit introduces a new CopyToRoutine struct, which is a set of
callback routines to copy tuples in a specific format. It also makes
the existing formats (text, CSV, and binary) utilize these format
callbacks.
This change is a preliminary step towards making the COPY TO command
extensible in terms of output formats.
Additionally, this refactoring contributes to a performance
improvement by reducing the number of "if" branches that need to be
checked on a per-row basis when sending field representations in text
or CSV mode. The performance benchmark results showed ~5% performance
gain in text or CSV mode.
Author: Sutou Kouhei <kou@clear-code.com>
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: Junwang Zhao <zhjwpku@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20231204.153548.2126325458835528809.kou@clear-code.com
explain.c has grown rather large, and the code that deals with the
DestReceiver that supports the SERIALIZE option is pretty easily severable
from the rest of explain.c; hence, move it to a separate file.
Reviewed-by: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoYutMw1Jgo8BWUmB3TqnOhsEAJiYO=rOQufF4gPLWmkLQ@mail.gmail.com
explain.c has grown rather large, so move various functions that
are principally concerned with output generation to a new source
file, explain_format.c, instead of lumping them in with everything
else that is part of explain.c
Reviewed-by: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoYutMw1Jgo8BWUmB3TqnOhsEAJiYO=rOQufF4gPLWmkLQ@mail.gmail.com