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3648 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane
cf73547075 Avoid potential deadlock in InitCatCachePhase2().
Opening a catcache's index could require reading from that cache's own
catalog, which of course would acquire AccessShareLock on the catalog.
So the original coding here risks locking index before heap, which could
deadlock against another backend trying to get exclusive locks in the
normal order.  Because InitCatCachePhase2 is only called when a backend
has to start up without a relcache init file, the deadlock was seldom seen
in the field.  (And by the same token, there's no need to worry about any
performance disadvantage; so not much point in trying to distinguish
exactly which catalogs have the risk.)

Bug report, diagnosis, and patch by Nikhil Sontakke.  Additional commentary
by me.  Back-patch to all supported branches.
2011-03-22 13:01:17 -04:00
Tom Lane
56423c143c On further reflection, we'd better do the same in int.c.
We previously heard of the same problem in int24div(), so there's not a
good reason to suppose the problem is confined to cases involving int8.
2011-03-11 19:04:14 -05:00
Tom Lane
24aad03e98 Put in some more safeguards against executing a division-by-zero.
Add dummy returns before every potential division-by-zero in int8.c,
because apparently further "improvements" in gcc's optimizer have
enabled it to break functions that weren't broken before.

Aurelien Jarno, via Martin Pitt
2011-03-11 18:19:07 -05:00
Itagaki Takahiro
9f37a76a1c Fix wrong error reports in 'number of array dimensions exceeds the
maximum allowed' messages, that have reported one-less dimensions.

Alexey Klyukin
2011-02-01 15:48:08 +09:00
Tom Lane
b414dde44c Fix miscalculation of itemsafter in array_set_slice().
If the slice to be assigned to was before the existing array lower bound
(requiring at least one null element to spring into existence to fill the
gap), the code miscalculated how many entries needed to be copied from
the old array's null bitmap.  This could result in trashing the array's
data area (as seen in bug #5840 from Karsten Loesing), or worse.

This has been broken since we first allowed the behavior of assigning to
non-adjacent slices, in 8.2.  Back-patch to all affected versions.
2011-01-17 12:40:51 -05:00
Tom Lane
5f588805c8 Ooops, no DATE_IS_NOBEGIN/DATE_IS_NOEND in 8.3 or 8.2 ...
I heard the siren call of git cherry-pick, but should have lashed myself
to the mast.
2010-12-28 23:01:25 -05:00
Tom Lane
dcb2b356b0 Avoid unexpected conversion overflow in planner for distant date values.
The "date" type supports a wider range of dates than int64 timestamps do.
However, there is pre-int64-timestamp code in the planner that assumes that
all date values can be converted to timestamp with impunity.  Fortunately,
what we really need out of the conversion is always a double (float8)
value; so even when the date is out of timestamp's range it's possible to
produce a sane answer.  All we need is a code path that doesn't try to
force the result into int64.  Per trouble report from David Rericha.

Back-patch to all supported versions.  Although this is surely a corner
case, there's not much point in advertising a date range wider than
timestamp's if we will choke on such values in unexpected places.
2010-12-28 22:50:44 -05:00
Tom Lane
a6a77ae407 Fix up handling of simple-form CASE with constant test expression.
eval_const_expressions() can replace CaseTestExprs with constants when
the surrounding CASE's test expression is a constant.  This confuses
ruleutils.c's heuristic for deparsing simple-form CASEs, leading to
Assert failures or "unexpected CASE WHEN clause" errors.  I had put in
a hack solution for that years ago (see commit
514ce7a331 of 2006-10-01), but bug #5794
from Peter Speck shows that that solution failed to cover all cases.

Fortunately, there's a much better way, which came to me upon reflecting
that Peter's "CASE TRUE WHEN" seemed pretty redundant: we can "simplify"
the simple-form CASE to the general form of CASE, by simply omitting the
constant test expression from the rebuilt CASE construct.  This is
intuitively valid because there is no need for the executor to evaluate
the test expression at runtime; it will never be referenced, because any
CaseTestExprs that would have referenced it are now replaced by constants.
This won't save a whole lot of cycles, since evaluating a Const is pretty
cheap, but a cycle saved is a cycle earned.  In any case it beats kluging
ruleutils.c still further.  So this patch improves const-simplification
and reverts the previous change in ruleutils.c.

Back-patch to all supported branches.  The bug exists in 8.1 too, but it's
out of warranty.
2010-12-19 15:32:17 -05:00
Tom Lane
d9b99b4b60 Fix erroneous parsing of tsquery input "... & !(subexpression) | ..."
After parsing a parenthesized subexpression, we must pop all pending
ANDs and NOTs off the stack, just like the case for a simple operand.
Per bug #5793.

Also fix clones of this routine in contrib/intarray and contrib/ltree,
where input of types query_int and ltxtquery had the same problem.

Back-patch to all supported versions.
2010-12-19 12:48:53 -05:00
Tom Lane
44dfc9cd71 Force default wal_sync_method to be fdatasync on Linux.
Recent versions of the Linux system header files cause xlogdefs.h to
believe that open_datasync should be the default sync method, whereas
formerly fdatasync was the default on Linux.  open_datasync is a bad
choice, first because it doesn't actually outperform fdatasync (in fact
the reverse), and second because we try to use O_DIRECT with it, causing
failures on certain filesystems (e.g., ext4 with data=journal option).
This part of the patch is largely per a proposal from Marti Raudsepp.
More extensive changes are likely to follow in HEAD, but this is as much
change as we want to back-patch.

Also clean up confusing code and incorrect documentation surrounding the
fsync_writethrough option.  Those changes shouldn't result in any actual
behavioral change, but I chose to back-patch them anyway to keep the
branches looking similar in this area.

In 9.0 and HEAD, also do some copy-editing on the WAL Reliability
documentation section.

Back-patch to all supported branches, since any of them might get used
on modern Linux versions.
2010-12-08 20:01:24 -05:00
Tom Lane
90e8efa338 Fix line_construct_pm() for the case of "infinite" (DBL_MAX) slope.
This code was just plain wrong: what you got was not a line through the
given point but a line almost indistinguishable from the Y-axis, although
not truly vertical.  The only caller that tries to use this function with
m == DBL_MAX is dist_ps_internal for the case where the lseg is horizontal;
it would end up producing the distance from the given point to the place
where the lseg's line crosses the Y-axis.  That function is used by other
operators too, so there are several operators that could compute wrong
distances from a line segment to something else.  Per bug #5745 from
jindiax.

Back-patch to all supported branches.
2010-11-10 16:54:27 -05:00
Tom Lane
34f89342e5 Ensure an index that uses a whole-row Var still depends on its table.
We failed to record any dependency on the underlying table for an index
declared like "create index i on t (foo(t.*))".  This would create trouble
if the table were dropped without previously dropping the index.  To fix,
simplify some overly-cute code in index_create(), accepting the possibility
that sometimes the whole-table dependency will be redundant.  Also document
this hazard in dependency.c.  Per report from Kevin Grittner.

In passing, prevent a core dump in pg_get_indexdef() if the index's table
can't be found.  I came across this while experimenting with Kevin's
example.  Not sure it's a real issue when the catalogs aren't corrupt, but
might as well be cautious.

Back-patch to all supported versions.
2010-11-02 17:15:24 -04:00
Magnus Hagander
5fff996347 Convert cvsignore to gitignore, and add .gitignore for build targets. 2010-09-22 12:57:12 +02:00
Tom Lane
a15e220a96 Fix up flushing of composite-type typcache entries to be driven directly by
SI invalidation events, rather than indirectly through the relcache.

In the previous coding, we had to flush a composite-type typcache entry
whenever we discarded the corresponding relcache entry.  This caused problems
at least when testing with RELCACHE_FORCE_RELEASE, as shown in recent report
from Jeff Davis, and might result in real-world problems given the kind of
unexpected relcache flush that that test mechanism is intended to model.

The new coding decouples relcache and typcache management, which is a good
thing anyway from a structural perspective.  The cost is that we have to
search the typcache linearly to find entries that need to be flushed.  There
are a couple of ways we could avoid that, but at the moment it's not clear
it's worth any extra trouble, because the typcache contains very few entries
in typical operation.

Back-patch to 8.2, the same as some other recent fixes in this general area.
The patch could be carried back to 8.0 with some additional work, but given
that it's only hypothetical whether we're fixing any problem observable in
the field, it doesn't seem worth the work now.
2010-09-02 03:17:06 +00:00
Tom Lane
1eece5da38 Arrange to fsync the contents of lockfiles (both postmaster.pid and the
socket lockfile) when writing them.  The lack of an fsync here may well
explain two different reports we've seen of corrupted lockfile contents,
which doesn't particularly bother the running server but can prevent a
new server from starting if the old one crashes.  Per suggestion from
Alvaro.

Back-patch to all supported versions.
2010-08-16 17:33:07 +00:00
Tom Lane
c358483c51 Fix Assert failure in PushOverrideSearchPath when trying to restore a search
path that specifies useTemp, but there is no active temp schema in the
current session.  (This can happen if the path was saved during a transaction
that created a temp schema and was later rolled back.)  For existing callers
it's sufficient to ignore the useTemp flag in this case, though we might
later want to offer an option to create a fresh temp schema.  So far as I can
tell this is just an Assert failure: in a non-assert build, the code would
push a zero onto the new search path, which is useless but not very harmful.
Per bug report from Heikki.

Back-patch to 8.3; prior versions don't have this code.
2010-08-13 16:27:35 +00:00
Tom Lane
8c378335b9 Fix core dump in QTNodeCompare when tsquery_cmp() is applied to two empty
tsqueries.  CompareTSQ has to have a guard for the case rather than blindly
applying QTNodeCompare to random data past the end of the datums.  Also,
change QTNodeCompare to be a little less trusting: use an actual test rather
than just Assert'ing that the input is sane.  Problem encountered while
investigating another issue (I saw a core dump in autoanalyze on a table
containing multiple empty tsquery values).

Back-patch to all branches with tsquery support.

In HEAD, also fix some bizarre (though not outright wrong) coding in
tsq_mcontains().
2010-08-03 00:10:58 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas
20b63e97b6 Oops, in the previous fix to prevent a cursor that's being used in a FOR
loop from being dropped, I missed subtransaction cleanup. Pinned portals
must be dropped at subtransaction cleanup just as they are at main
transaction cleanup.

Per bug #5556 by Robert Walker. Backpatch to 8.0, 7.4 didn't have
subtransactions.
2010-07-13 09:02:46 +00:00
Tom Lane
8c21b4e922 Avoid an Assert failure in deconstruct_array() by making get_attstatsslot()
use the actual element type of the array it's disassembling, rather than
trusting the type OID passed in by its caller.  This is needed because
sometimes the planner passes in a type OID that's only binary-compatible
with the target column's type, rather than being an exact match.  Per an
example from Bernd Helmle.

Possibly we should refactor get_attstatsslot/free_attstatsslot to not expect
the caller to supply type ID data at all, but for now I'll just do the
minimum-change fix.

Back-patch to 7.4.  Bernd's test case only crashes back to 8.0, but since
these subroutines are the same in 7.4, I suspect there may be variant
cases that would crash 7.4 as well.
2010-07-09 22:58:01 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas
8234597065 The previous fix in CVS HEAD and 8.4 for handling the case where a cursor
being used in a PL/pgSQL FOR loop is closed was inadequate, as Tom Lane
pointed out. The bug affects FOR statement variants too, because you can
close an implicitly created cursor too by guessing the "<unnamed portal X>"
name created for it.

To fix that, "pin" the portal to prevent it from being dropped while it's
being used in a PL/pgSQL FOR loop. Backpatch all the way to 7.4 which is
the oldest supported version.
2010-07-05 09:27:31 +00:00
Tom Lane
63c0780dba Rewrite LIKE's %-followed-by-_ optimization so it really works (this time
for sure ;-)).  It now also optimizes more cases, such as %_%_.  Improve
comments too.  Per bug #5478.

In passing, also rename the TCHAR macro to GETCHAR, because pgindent is
messing with the formatting of the former (apparently it now thinks TCHAR
is a typedef name).

Back-patch to 8.3, where the bug was introduced.
2010-05-28 17:35:36 +00:00
Tom Lane
ce2a001a2c Change ps_status.c to explicitly track the current logical length of ps_buffer.
This saves cycles in get_ps_display() on many popular platforms, and more
importantly ensures that get_ps_display() will correctly return an empty
string if init_ps_display() hasn't been called yet.  Per trouble report
from Ray Stell, in which log_line_prefix %i produced junk early in backend
startup.

Back-patch to 8.0.  7.4 doesn't have %i and its version of get_ps_display()
makes no pretense of avoiding pad junk anyhow.
2010-05-27 19:19:50 +00:00
Tom Lane
db01ccc052 Work around a subtle portability problem in use of printf %s format.
Depending on which spec you read, field widths and precisions in %s may be
counted either in bytes or characters.  Our code was assuming bytes, which
is wrong at least for glibc's implementation, and in any case libc might
have a different idea of the prevailing encoding than we do.  Hence, for
portable results we must avoid using anything more complex than just "%s"
unless the string to be printed is known to be all-ASCII.

This patch fixes the cases I could find, including the psql formatting
failure reported by Hernan Gonzalez.  In HEAD only, I also added comments
to some places where it appears safe to continue using "%.*s".
2010-05-08 16:40:14 +00:00
Tom Lane
32616fb1d5 Fix a problem introduced by my patch of 2010-01-12 that revised the way
relcache reload works.  In the patched code, a relcache entry in process of
being rebuilt doesn't get unhooked from the relcache hash table; which means
that if a cache flush occurs due to sinval queue overrun while we're
rebuilding it, the entry could get blown away by RelationCacheInvalidate,
resulting in crash or misbehavior.  Fix by ensuring that an entry being
rebuilt has positive refcount, so it won't be seen as a target for removal
if a cache flush occurs.  (This will mean that the entry gets rebuilt twice
in such a scenario, but that's okay.)  It appears that the problem can only
arise within a transaction that has previously reassigned the relfilenode of
a pre-existing table, via TRUNCATE or a similar operation.  Per bug #5412
from Rusty Conover.

Back-patch to 8.2, same as the patch that introduced the problem.
I think that the failure can't actually occur in 8.2, since it lacks the
rd_newRelfilenodeSubid optimization, but let's make it work like the later
branches anyway.

Patch by Heikki, slightly editorialized on by me.
2010-04-14 21:31:27 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera
e429448f33 Prevent ALTER USER f RESET ALL from removing the settings that were put there
by a superuser -- "ALTER USER f RESET setting" already disallows removing such a
setting.

Apply the same treatment to ALTER DATABASE d RESET ALL when run by a database
owner that's not superuser.
2010-03-25 14:45:06 +00:00
Tom Lane
f821c16e95 Export xml.c's libxml-error-handling support so that contrib/xml2 can use it
too, instead of duplicating the functionality (badly).

I renamed xml_init to pg_xml_init, because the former seemed just a bit too
generic to be safe as a global symbol.  I considered likewise renaming
xml_ereport to pg_xml_ereport, but felt that the reference to ereport probably
made it sufficiently PG-centric already.
2010-03-03 17:30:01 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
2193da28b1 pgindent run on xml.c in 8.3 branch, per request from Tom. 2010-03-03 00:32:49 +00:00
Tom Lane
a8cf68f7df Back-patch changes of 2009-05-13 in xml.c's memory management.
I was afraid to do this when these changes were first made, but now that
8.4 has seen some field use it should be all right to back-patch.  These
changes are really quite necessary in order to give xml.c any hope of
co-existing with loadable modules that also wish to use libxml2.
2010-03-01 02:21:40 +00:00
Magnus Hagander
0a1ec273a0 Add configuration parameter ssl_renegotiation_limit to control
how often we do SSL session key renegotiation. Can be set to
0 to disable renegotiation completely, which is required if
a broken SSL library is used (broken patches to CVE-2009-3555
a known cause) or when using a client library that can't do
renegotiation.
2010-02-25 13:26:23 +00:00
Tom Lane
7309f3340c Fix assorted core dumps and Assert failures that could occur during
AbortTransaction or AbortSubTransaction, when trying to clean up after an
error that prevented (sub)transaction start from completing:
* access to TopTransactionResourceOwner that might not exist
* assert failure in AtEOXact_GUC, if AtStart_GUC not called yet
* assert failure or core dump in AfterTriggerEndSubXact, if
  AfterTriggerBeginSubXact not called yet

Per testing by injecting elog(ERROR) at successive steps in StartTransaction
and StartSubTransaction.  It's not clear whether all of these cases could
really occur in the field, but at least one of them is easily exposed by
simple stress testing, as per my accidental discovery yesterday.
2010-01-24 21:49:39 +00:00
Tom Lane
61da9c4e25 Insert CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS calls into loops in dbsize.c, to ensure that
the various disk-size-reporting functions will respond to query cancel
reasonably promptly even in very large databases.  Per report from
Kevin Grittner.
2010-01-23 21:29:12 +00:00
Tom Lane
317be817f4 Fix portalmem.c to avoid keeping a dangling pointer to a cached plan list
after it's released its reference count for the cached plan.  There are
code paths that might try to examine the plan list before noticing that
the portal is already in aborted state.  Report and diagnosis by Tatsuo
Ishii, though this isn't exactly his proposed patch.
2010-01-18 02:30:37 +00:00
Tom Lane
8a6a40dea6 When loading critical system indexes into the relcache, ensure we lock the
underlying catalog not only the index itself.  Otherwise, if the cache
load process touches the catalog (which will happen for many though not
all of these indexes), we are locking index before parent table, which can
result in a deadlock against processes that are trying to lock them in the
normal order.  Per today's failure on buildfarm member gothic_moth; it's
surprising the problem hadn't been identified before.

Back-patch to 8.2.  Earlier releases didn't have the issue because they
didn't try to lock these indexes during load (instead assuming that they
couldn't change schema at all during multiuser operation).
2010-01-13 23:07:22 +00:00
Tom Lane
d4b7cf062c Fix relcache reload mechanism to be more robust in the face of errors
occurring during a reload, such as query-cancel.  Instead of zeroing out
an existing relcache entry and rebuilding it in place, build a new relcache
entry, then swap its contents with the old one, then free the new entry.
This avoids problems with code believing that a previously obtained pointer
to a cache entry must still reference a valid entry, as seen in recent
failures on buildfarm member jaguar.  (jaguar is using CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS
which raises the probability of failure substantially, but the problem
could occur in the field without that.)  The previous design was okay
when it was made, but subtransactions and the ResourceOwner mechanism
make it unsafe now.

Also, make more use of the already existing rd_isvalid flag, so that we
remember that the entry requires rebuilding even if the first attempt fails.

Back-patch as far as 8.2.  Prior versions have enough issues around relcache
reload anyway (due to inadequate locking) that fixing this one doesn't seem
worthwhile.
2010-01-12 18:12:33 +00:00
Tom Lane
f90acefc35 Make bit/varbit substring() treat any negative length as meaning "all the rest
of the string".  The previous coding treated only -1 that way, and would
produce an invalid result value for other negative values.

We ought to fix it so that 2-parameter bit substring() is a different C
function and the 3-parameter form throws error for negative length, but
that takes a pg_proc change which is impractical in the back branches;
and in any case somebody might be relying on -1 working this way.
So just do this as a back-patchable fix.
2010-01-07 19:53:22 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas
67d25e5a85 Previous fix for temporary file management broke returning a set from
PL/pgSQL function within an exception handler. Make sure we use the right
resource owner when we create the tuplestore to hold returned tuples.

Simplify tuplestore API so that the caller doesn't need to be in the right
memory context when calling tuplestore_put* functions. tuplestore.c
automatically switches to the memory context used when the tuplestore was
created. Tuplesort was already modified like this earlier. This patch also
removes the now useless MemoryContextSwitch calls from callers.

Report by Aleksei on pgsql-bugs on Dec 22 2009. Backpatch to 8.1, like
the previous patch that broke this.
2009-12-29 17:41:18 +00:00
Tom Lane
65a5d12be1 Fix integer-to-bit-string conversions to handle the first fractional byte
correctly when the output bit width is wider than the given integer by
something other than a multiple of 8 bits.

This has been wrong since I first wrote that code for 8.0 :-(.  Kudos to
Roman Kononov for being the first to notice, though I didn't use his
patch.  Per bug #5237.
2009-12-12 19:24:51 +00:00
Tom Lane
e3b01bc1e1 Prevent indirect security attacks via changing session-local state within
an allegedly immutable index function.  It was previously recognized that
we had to prevent such a function from executing SET/RESET ROLE/SESSION
AUTHORIZATION, or it could trivially obtain the privileges of the session
user.  However, since there is in general no privilege checking for changes
of session-local state, it is also possible for such a function to change
settings in a way that might subvert later operations in the same session.
Examples include changing search_path to cause an unexpected function to
be called, or replacing an existing prepared statement with another one
that will execute a function of the attacker's choosing.

The present patch secures VACUUM, ANALYZE, and CREATE INDEX/REINDEX against
these threats, which are the same places previously deemed to need protection
against the SET ROLE issue.  GUC changes are still allowed, since there are
many useful cases for that, but we prevent security problems by forcing a
rollback of any GUC change after completing the operation.  Other cases are
handled by throwing an error if any change is attempted; these include temp
table creation, closing a cursor, and creating or deleting a prepared
statement.  (In 7.4, the infrastructure to roll back GUC changes doesn't
exist, so we settle for rejecting changes of "search_path" in these contexts.)

Original report and patch by Gurjeet Singh, additional analysis by
Tom Lane.

Security: CVE-2009-4136
2009-12-09 21:58:17 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas
dd7321f81c Fix bug in temporary file management with subtransactions. A cursor opened
in a subtransaction stays open even if the subtransaction is aborted, so
any temporary files related to it must stay alive as well. With the patch,
we use ResourceOwners to track open temporary files and don't automatically
close them at subtransaction end (though in the normal case temporary files
are registered with the subtransaction resource owner and will therefore be
closed).

At end of top transaction, we still check that there's no temporary files
marked as close-at-end-of-transaction open, but that's now just a debugging
cross-check as the resource owner cleanup should've closed them already.
2009-12-03 11:03:44 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas
c2c86e4881 Fix off-by-one bug in bitncmp(): When comparing a number of bits divisible by
8, bitncmp() may dereference a pointer one byte out of bounds.

Chris Mikkelson (bug #5101)
2009-10-08 04:46:37 +00:00
Tom Lane
8b720b5723 Fix RelationCacheInitializePhase2 (Phase3, in HEAD) to cope with the
possibility of shared-inval messages causing a relcache flush while it tries
to fill in missing data in preloaded relcache entries.  There are actually
two distinct failure modes here:

1. The flush could delete the next-to-be-processed cache entry, causing
the subsequent hash_seq_search calls to go off into the weeds.  This is
the problem reported by Michael Brown, and I believe it also accounts
for bug #5074.  The simplest fix is to restart the hashtable scan after
we've read any new data from the catalogs.  It appears that pre-8.4
branches have not suffered from this failure, because by chance there were
no other catalogs sharing the same hash chains with the catalogs that
RelationCacheInitializePhase2 had work to do for.  However that's obviously
pretty fragile, and it seems possible that derivative versions with
additional system catalogs might be vulnerable, so I'm back-patching this
part of the fix anyway.

2. The flush could delete the *current* cache entry, in which case the
pointer to the newly-loaded data would end up being stored into an
already-deleted Relation struct.  As long as it was still deleted, the only
consequence would be some leaked space in CacheMemoryContext.  But it seems
possible that the Relation struct could already have been recycled, in
which case this represents a hard-to-reproduce clobber of cached data
structures, with unforeseeable consequences.  The fix here is to pin the
entry while we work on it.

In passing, also change RelationCacheInitializePhase2 to Assert that
formrdesc() set up the relation's cached TupleDesc (rd_att) with the
correct type OID and hasoids values.  This is more appropriate than
silently updating the values, because the original tupdesc might already
have been copied into the catcache.  However this part of the patch is
not in HEAD because it fails due to some questionable recent changes in
formrdesc :-(.  That will be cleaned up in a subsequent patch.
2009-09-26 18:25:03 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas
691efa1500 Fix encoding handling in xml binary input function. If the XML header didn't
specify an encoding explicitly, we used to treat it as being in database
encoding when we parsed it, but then perform a UTF-8 -> database encoding
conversion on it, which was completely bogus. It's now consistently treated as
UTF-8.
2009-09-04 10:49:50 +00:00
Tom Lane
5927d9f642 Make LOAD of an already-loaded library into a no-op, instead of attempting
to unload and re-load the library.

The difficulty with unloading a library is that we haven't defined safe
protocols for doing so.  In particular, there's no safe mechanism for
getting out of a "hook" function pointer unless libraries are unloaded
in reverse order of loading.  And there's no mechanism at all for undefining
a custom GUC variable, so GUC would be left with a pointer to an old value
that might or might not still be valid, and very possibly wouldn't be in
the same place anymore.

While the unload and reload behavior had some usefulness in easing
development of new loadable libraries, it's of no use whatever to normal
users, so just disabling it isn't giving up that much.  Someday we might
care to expend the effort to develop safe unload protocols; but even if
we did, there'd be little certainty that every third-party loadable module
was following them, so some security restrictions would still be needed.

Back-patch to 8.2; before that, LOAD was superuser-only anyway.

Security: unprivileged users could crash backend.  CVE not assigned yet
2009-09-03 22:11:22 +00:00
Tom Lane
fe8170dcfa Disallow RESET ROLE and RESET SESSION AUTHORIZATION inside security-definer
functions.

This extends the previous patch that forbade SETting these variables inside
security-definer functions.  RESET is equally a security hole, since it
would allow regaining privileges of the caller; furthermore it can trigger
Assert failures and perhaps other internal errors, since the code is not
expecting these variables to change in such contexts.  The previous patch
did not cover this case because assign hooks don't really have enough
information, so move the responsibility for preventing this into guc.c.

Problem discovered by Heikki Linnakangas.

Security: no CVE assigned yet, extends CVE-2007-6600
2009-09-03 22:08:23 +00:00
Tom Lane
d40ef0dc0b Remove duplicate variable initializations identified by clang static checker.
One of these represents a nontrivial bug (a promptly-leaked palloc), so
backpatch.

Greg Stark
2009-08-30 16:53:45 +00:00
Tom Lane
f57d5b7b4b Fix overflow for INTERVAL 'x ms' where x is more than a couple million,
and integer datetimes are in use.  Per bug report from Hubert Depesz
Lubaczewski.

Alex Hunsaker
2009-08-18 21:23:28 +00:00
Teodor Sigaev
fe37cbb841 Fix incorrect cleanup of tsquery in ts_rewrite(). Per bug #4933 by
Aaron Marcuse-Kubitza <aaronmk@blackducksoftware.com>
2009-07-28 09:32:45 +00:00
Tom Lane
b5f32d8dae Do a conditional SPI_push/SPI_pop when replanning a query in
RevalidateCachedPlan.  This is to avoid a "SPI_ERROR_CONNECT" failure when
the planner calls a SPI-using function and we are already inside one.
The alternative fix is to expect callers of RevalidateCachedPlan to do this,
which seems likely to result in additional hard-to-detect bugs of omission.
Per reports from Frank van Vugt and Marek Lewczuk.

Back-patch to 8.3. It's much harder to trigger the bug in 8.3, due to a
smaller set of cases in which plans can be invalidated, but it could happen.
(I think perhaps only a SI reset event could make 8.3 fail here, but that's
certainly within the realm of possibility.)
2009-07-14 15:38:03 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas
96ee4c9726 Fix ancient bug in handling of to_char modifier 'TH', when used with HH.
In what seems like an oversight, we used to treat 'TH' the same as lowercase
'th', but only with HH/HH12.
2009-07-06 19:11:53 +00:00
Tom Lane
462c280f16 Fix an ancient error in dist_ps (distance from point to line segment), which
a number of other geometric operators also depend on.  It miscalculated the
slope of the perpendicular to the given line segment anytime that slope was
other than 0, infinite, or +/-1.  In some cases the error would be masked
because the true closest point on the line segment was one of its endpoints
rather than the intersection point, but in other cases it could give an
arbitrarily bad answer.  Per bug #4872 from Nick Roosevelt.

Bug goes clear back to Berkeley days, so patch all supported branches.
Make a couple of cosmetic adjustments while at it.
2009-06-23 16:25:09 +00:00