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5563 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane
218cf59b60 Make standard maintenance operations (including VACUUM, ANALYZE, REINDEX,
and CLUSTER) execute as the table owner rather than the calling user, using
the same privilege-switching mechanism already used for SECURITY DEFINER
functions.  The purpose of this change is to ensure that user-defined
functions used in index definitions cannot acquire the privileges of a
superuser account that is performing routine maintenance.  While a function
used in an index is supposed to be IMMUTABLE and thus not able to do anything
very interesting, there are several easy ways around that restriction; and
even if we could plug them all, there would remain a risk of reading sensitive
information and broadcasting it through a covert channel such as CPU usage.

To prevent bypassing this security measure, execution of SET SESSION
AUTHORIZATION and SET ROLE is now forbidden within a SECURITY DEFINER context.

Thanks to Itagaki Takahiro for reporting this vulnerability.

Security: CVE-2007-6600
2008-01-03 21:25:58 +00:00
Tom Lane
b7f1fe6c46 Ensure that the result of evaluating a function during constant-expression
simplification gets detoasted before it is incorporated into a Const node.
Otherwise, if an immutable function were to return a TOAST pointer (an
unlikely case, but it can be made to happen), we would end up with a plan
that depends on the continued existence of the out-of-line toast datum.
2007-10-11 21:28:39 +00:00
Tom Lane
245dd2bca7 Fix bogus calculation of potential output string length in translate(). 2007-09-22 05:36:20 +00:00
Tom Lane
2f2baf9299 Fix aboriginal mistake in lazy VACUUM's code for truncating away
no-longer-needed pages at the end of a table.  We thought we could throw away
pages containing HEAPTUPLE_DEAD tuples; but this is not so, because such
tuples very likely have index entries pointing at them, and we wouldn't have
removed the index entries.  The problem only emerges in a somewhat unlikely
race condition: the dead tuples have to have been inserted by a transaction
that later aborted, and this has to have happened between VACUUM's initial
scan of the page and then rechecking it for empty in count_nondeletable_pages.
But that timespan will include an index-cleaning pass, so it's not all that
hard to hit.  This seems to explain a couple of previously unsolved bug
reports.
2007-09-16 02:38:31 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut
cc6dcf4c08 Translation updates 2007-09-13 20:49:39 +00:00
Tom Lane
ffaaaf9918 Fix potential access-off-the-end-of-memory in varbit_out(): it fetched the
byte after the last full byte of the bit array, regardless of whether that
byte was part of the valid data or not.  Found by buildfarm testing.
Thanks to Stefan Kaltenbrunner for nailing down the cause.
2007-08-21 02:40:40 +00:00
Tom Lane
681690f4e3 Fix elog.c to avoid infinite recursion (leading to backend crash) when
log_min_error_statement is active and there is some problem in logging the
current query string; for example, that it's too long to include in the log
message without running out of memory.  This problem has existed since the
log_min_error_statement feature was introduced.  No doubt the reason it
wasn't detected long ago is that 8.2 is the first release that defaults
log_min_error_statement to less than PANIC level.
Per report from Bill Moran.
2007-07-21 22:12:38 +00:00
Tom Lane
c556447c70 Make replace(), split_part(), and string_to_array() behave somewhat sanely
when handed an invalidly-encoded pattern.  The previous coding could get
into an infinite loop if pg_mb2wchar_with_len() returned a zero-length
string after we'd tested for nonempty pattern; which is exactly what it
will do if the string consists only of an incomplete multibyte character.
This led to either an out-of-memory error or a backend crash depending
on platform.  Per report from Wiktor Wodecki.
2007-07-19 20:34:54 +00:00
Tom Lane
f1dda4c54e Fix outfuncs.c to dump A_Const nodes representing NULLs correctly. This has
been broken since forever, but was not noticed because people seldom look
at raw parse trees.  AFAIK, no impact on users except that debug_print_parse
might fail; but patch it all the way back anyway.  Per report from Jeff Ross.
2007-07-17 01:22:25 +00:00
Tom Lane
7ca6422075 Fix failure to restart Postgres when Linux kernel returns EIDRM for shmctl().
This is a Linux kernel bug that apparently exists in every extant kernel
version: sometimes shmctl() will fail with EIDRM when EINVAL is correct.
We were assuming that EIDRM indicates a possible conflict with pre-existing
backends, and refusing to start the postmaster when this happens.  Fortunately,
there does not seem to be any case where Linux can legitimately return EIDRM
(it doesn't track shmem segments in a way that would allow that), so we can
get away with just assuming that EIDRM means EINVAL on this platform.

Per reports from Michael Fuhr and Jon Lapham --- it's a bit surprising
we have not seen more reports, actually.
2007-07-02 20:12:26 +00:00
Tom Lane
175c3b853a Fix a passel of ancient bugs in to_char(), including two distinct buffer
overruns (neither of which seem likely to be exploitable as security holes,
fortunately, since the provoker can't control the data written).  One of
these is due to choosing to stomp on the output of a called function, which
is bad news in any case; make it treat the called functions' results as
read-only.  Avoid some unnecessary palloc/pfree traffic too; it's not
really helpful to free small temporary objects, and again this is presuming
more than it ought to about the nature of the results of called functions.
Per report from Patrick Welche and additional code-reading by Imad.
2007-06-29 01:52:21 +00:00
Tom Lane
01e570e684 transformColumnDefinition failed to complain about
create table foo (bar int default null default 3);
due to not thinking about the special-case handling of DEFAULT NULL.
Problem noticed while investigating bug #3396.
2007-06-20 18:21:51 +00:00
Tom Lane
cbe8af81b2 CREATE DOMAIN ... DEFAULT NULL failed because gram.y special-cases DEFAULT
NULL and DefineDomain didn't.  Bug goes all the way back to original coding
of domains.  Per bug #3396 from Sergey Burladyan.
2007-06-20 18:16:30 +00:00
Tom Lane
72cbfa4fcc Fix aboriginal bug in BufFileDumpBuffer that would cause it to write the
wrong data when dumping a bufferload that crosses a component-file boundary.
This probably has not been seen in the wild because (a) component files are
normally 1GB apiece and (b) non-block-aligned buffer usage is relatively
rare.  But it's fairly easy to reproduce a problem if one reduces RELSEG_SIZE
in a test build.  Kudos to Kurt Harriman for spotting the bug.
2007-06-01 23:43:39 +00:00
Tom Lane
2d91f676b0 Fix dynahash.c to suppress hash bucket splits while a hash_seq_search() scan
is in progress on the same hashtable.  This seems the least invasive way to
fix the recently-recognized problem that a split could cause the scan to
visit entries twice or (with much lower probability) miss them entirely.
The only field-reported problem caused by this is the "failed to re-find
shared lock object" PANIC in COMMIT PREPARED reported by Michel Dorochevsky,
which was caused by multiply visited entries.  However, it seems certain
that mdsync() is vulnerable to missing required fsync's due to missed
entries, and I am fearful that RelationCacheInitializePhase2() might be at
risk as well.  Because of that and the generalized hazard presented by this
bug, back-patch all the supported branches.

Along the way, fix pg_prepared_statement() and pg_cursor() to not assume
that the hashtables they are examining will stay static between calls.
This is risky regardless of the newly noted dynahash problem, because
hash_seq_search() has never promised to cope with deletion of table entries
other than the just-returned one.  There may be no bug here because the only
supported way to call these functions is via ExecMakeTableFunctionResult()
which will cycle them to completion before doing anything very interesting,
but it seems best to get rid of the assumption.  This affects 8.2 and HEAD
only, since those functions weren't there earlier.
2007-04-26 23:25:48 +00:00
Tom Lane
a796aac46f Support explicit placement of the temporary-table schema within search_path.
This is needed to allow a security-definer function to set a truly secure
value of search_path.  Without it, a malicious user can use temporary objects
to execute code with the privileges of the security-definer function.  Even
pushing the temp schema to the back of the search path is not quite good
enough, because a function or operator at the back of the path might still
capture control from one nearer the front due to having a more exact datatype
match.  Hence, disable searching the temp schema altogether for functions and
operators.

Security: CVE-2007-2138
2007-04-20 02:38:59 +00:00
Tatsuo Ishii
c442dc28d6 Fix pg_wchar_table's maxmblen field of EUC_CN, EUC_TW, MULE_INTERNAL
and GB18030. patches from ITAGAKI Takahiro.
2007-03-26 11:59:37 +00:00
Tom Lane
6ce2ca3332 Fix a longstanding bug in VACUUM FULL's handling of update chains. The code
did not expect that a DEAD tuple could follow a RECENTLY_DEAD tuple in an
update chain, but because the OldestXmin rule for determining deadness is a
simplification of reality, it is possible for this situation to occur
(implying that the RECENTLY_DEAD tuple is in fact dead to all observers,
but this patch does not attempt to exploit that).  The code would follow a
chain forward all the way, but then stop before a DEAD tuple when backing
up, meaning that not all of the chain got moved.  This could lead to copying
the chain multiple times (resulting in duplicate copies of the live tuple at
its end), or leaving dangling index entries behind (which, aside from
generating warnings from later vacuums, creates a risk of wrong query
results or bogus duplicate-key errors once the heap slot the index entry
points to is repopulated).

The fix is to recheck HeapTupleSatisfiesVacuum while following a chain
forward, and to stop if a DEAD tuple is reached.  Each contiguous group
of RECENTLY_DEAD tuples will therefore be copied as a separate chain.
The patch also adds a couple of extra sanity checks to verify correct
behavior.

Per report and test case from Pavan Deolasee.
2007-03-14 18:49:32 +00:00
Tom Lane
4edaffa1d1 Fix markQueryForLocking() to work correctly in the presence of nested views.
It has been wrong for this case since it was first written for 7.1 :-(
Per report from Pavel Hanák.
2007-03-01 18:51:03 +00:00
Tom Lane
6be54294cb Repair insufficiently careful type checking for SQL-language functions:
we should check that the function code returns the claimed result datatype
every time we parse the function for execution.  Formerly, for simple
scalar result types we assumed the creation-time check was sufficient, but
this fails if the function selects from a table that's been redefined since
then, and even more obviously fails if check_function_bodies had been OFF.

This is a significant security hole: not only can one trivially crash the
backend, but with appropriate misuse of pass-by-reference datatypes it is
possible to read out arbitrary locations in the server process's memory,
which could allow retrieving database content the user should not be able
to see.  Our thanks to Jeff Trout for the initial report.

Security: CVE-2007-0555
2007-02-02 00:04:16 +00:00
Tom Lane
eea0902ead Correct an old logic error in btree page splitting: when considering a split
exactly at the point where we need to insert a new item, the calculation used
the wrong size for the "high key" of the new left page.  This could lead to
choosing an unworkable split, resulting in "PANIC: failed to add item to the
left sibling" (or "right sibling") failure.  Although this bug has been there
a long time, it's very difficult to trigger a failure before 8.2, since there
was generally a lot of free space on both sides of a chosen split.  In 8.2,
where the user-selected fill factor determines how much free space the code
tries to leave, an unworkable split is much more likely.  Report by Joe
Conway, diagnosis and fix by Heikki Linnakangas.
2007-01-27 20:53:59 +00:00
Tom Lane
d56c800c40 Get pg_utf_mblen(), pg_utf2wchar_with_len(), and utf2ucs() all on the same
page about the maximum UTF8 sequence length we support (4 bytes since 8.1,
3 before that).  pg_utf2wchar_with_len never got updated to support 4-byte
characters at all, and in any case had a buffer-overrun risk in that it
could produce multiple pg_wchars from what mblen claims to be just one UTF8
character.  The only reason we don't have a major security hole is that most
callers allocate worst-case output buffers; the sole exception in released
versions appears to be pre-8.2 iwchareq() (ie, ILIKE), which can be crashed
due to zeroing out its return address --- but AFAICS that can't be exploited
for anything more than a crash, due to inability to control what gets written
there.  Per report from James Russell and Michael Fuhr.

Pre-8.1 the risk is much less, but I still think pg_utf2wchar_with_len's
behavior given an incomplete final character risks buffer overrun, so
back-patch that logic change anyway.

This patch also makes sure that UTF8 sequences exceeding the supported
length (whichever it is) are consistently treated as error cases, rather
than being treated like a valid shorter sequence in some places.
2007-01-24 17:12:47 +00:00
Tom Lane
0b29676aa6 Fix regex_fixed_prefix() to cope reasonably well with regex patterns of the
form '^(foo)$'.  Before, these could never be optimized into indexscans.
The recent changes to make psql and pg_dump generate such patterns (for \d
commands and -t and related switches, respectively) therefore represented
a big performance hit for people with large pg_class catalogs, as seen in
recent gripe from Erik Jones.  While at it, be more paranoid about
case-sensitivity checking in multibyte encodings, and fix some other
corner cases in which a regex might be interpreted too liberally.
2007-01-03 22:40:04 +00:00
Tom Lane
d3db2bd80c Repair bug #2839: the various ExecReScan functions need to reset
ps_TupFromTlist in plan nodes that make use of it.  This was being done
correctly in join nodes and Result nodes but not in any relation-scan nodes.
Bug would lead to bogus results if a set-returning function appeared in the
targetlist of a subquery that could be rescanned after partial execution,
for example a subquery within EXISTS().  Bug has been around forever :-(
... surprising it wasn't reported before.
2006-12-26 19:27:26 +00:00
Tom Lane
152dbad1eb Clean up rather sloppy fix in HEAD for the ancient bug that CREATE CONVERSION
didn't create a dependency from the new conversion to its schema.  Back-patch
to all supported releases.
2006-08-31 17:32:01 +00:00
Tom Lane
fe090f0778 Back-patch 7.4-era fix for memory leak with SSL connections due to
missing X509_free() calls.  Per a request from a Red Hat customer;
seems silly for Red Hat to be shipping a patch that's not in upstream.
2006-06-23 14:42:52 +00:00
Tom Lane
9e63275633 Back-port Postgres 7.4 spinlock code into 7.3 branch. This adds
previously-missing spinlock code for x86_64 and ppc64 architectures,
converts the ppc/ppc64 code into gcc inlines, and provides a better
spinlock backoff algorithm on all architectures.  Aside from being
almost identical to the community 7.4 source code, this exact patch
has been in use for awhile in Red Hat's RHEL3 RPMs, so I have pretty
good confidence in it.  Why bother, you ask?  I'm taking pity on a
couple of buildfarm members that have been vainly trying to build 7.3
on these 64-bit architectures.
2006-06-01 23:18:11 +00:00
Tom Lane
16e77740ea Add a new GUC parameter backslash_quote, which determines whether the SQL
parser will allow "\'" to be used to represent a literal quote mark.  The
"\'" representation has been deprecated for some time in favor of the
SQL-standard representation "''" (two single quote marks), but it has been
used often enough that just disallowing it immediately won't do.  Hence
backslash_quote allows the settings "on", "off", and "safe_encoding",
the last meaning to allow "\'" only if client_encoding is a valid server
encoding.  That is now the default, and the reason is that in encodings
such as SJIS that allow 0x5c (ASCII backslash) to be the last byte of a
multibyte character, accepting "\'" allows SQL-injection attacks as per
CVE-2006-2314 (further details will be published after release).  The
"on" setting is available for backward compatibility, but it must not be
used with clients that are exposed to untrusted input.

Thanks to Akio Ishida and Yasuo Ohgaki for identifying this security issue.
2006-05-21 20:12:20 +00:00
Tom Lane
5c4de67044 Change the backend to reject strings containing invalidly-encoded multibyte
characters in all cases.  Formerly we mostly just threw warnings for invalid
input, and failed to detect it at all if no encoding conversion was required.
The tighter check is needed to defend against SQL-injection attacks as per
CVE-2006-2313 (further details will be published after release).  Embedded
zero (null) bytes will be rejected as well.  The checks are applied during
input to the backend (receipt from client or COPY IN), so it no longer seems
necessary to check in textin() and related routines; any string arriving at
those functions will already have been validated.  Conversion failure
reporting (for characters with no equivalent in the destination encoding)
has been cleaned up and made consistent while at it.

Also, fix a few longstanding errors in little-used encoding conversion
routines: win1251_to_iso, win866_to_iso, euc_tw_to_big5, euc_tw_to_mic,
mic_to_euc_tw were all broken to varying extents.

Patches by Tatsuo Ishii and Tom Lane.  Thanks to Akio Ishida and Yasuo Ohgaki
for identifying the security issues.
2006-05-21 20:07:13 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
583a472f7b Change \' to '', for SQL standards compliance. Backpatch to 7.3, 7.4,
and 8.0.  Later releases already patched.
2006-05-21 19:56:41 +00:00
Tom Lane
506747337b Fix the sense of the test on DH_check()'s return value. This was preventing
custom-generated DH parameters from actually being used by the server.
Found by Michael Fuhr.
2006-05-12 22:45:06 +00:00
Tom Lane
76dc24091f Remove unnecessary .seg/.section directives, per Alan Stange. 2006-05-11 22:00:12 +00:00
Tatsuo Ishii
342fae3dc5 Minor teak. 2006-03-04 12:35:08 +00:00
Tatsuo Ishii
52c4e32d5f Tighten up SJIS byte sequence check. Now we reject invalid SJIS byte
sequence such as "0x95 0x27". Patches from Akio Ishida.
2006-03-04 12:32:59 +00:00
Tom Lane
118f54d06d Fix bug in SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION that allows unprivileged users to crash
the server, if it has been compiled with Asserts enabled (CVE-2006-0553).
Thanks to Akio Ishida for reporting this problem.
2006-02-12 22:33:47 +00:00
Tom Lane
3cbc8b6fb4 Repair longstanding bug in slru/clog logic: it is possible for two backends
to try to create a log segment file concurrently, but the code erroneously
specified O_EXCL to open(), resulting in a needless failure.  Before 7.4,
it was even a PANIC condition :-(.  Correct code is actually simpler than
what we had, because we can just say O_CREAT to start with and not need a
second open() call.  I believe this accounts for several recent reports of
hard-to-reproduce "could not create file ...: File exists" errors in both
pg_clog and pg_subtrans.
2006-01-21 04:38:54 +00:00
Tom Lane
a6cc7db9a6 Repair "Halloween problem" in EvalPlanQual: a tuple that's been inserted by
our own command (or more generally, xmin = our xact and cmin >= current
command ID) should not be seen as good.  Else we may try to update rows
we already updated.  This error was inserted last August while fixing the
even bigger problem that the old coding wouldn't see *any* tuples inserted
by our own transaction as good.  Per report from Euler Taveira de Oliveira.
2006-01-12 21:49:41 +00:00
Tom Lane
88f2145326 Fix failure to apply domain constraints to a NULL constant that's added to
an INSERT target list during rule rewriting.  Per report from John Supplee.
2006-01-06 20:11:36 +00:00
Tom Lane
040d3e63a7 Arrange to set the LC_XXX environment variables to match our locale setup.
Back-patch of previous fix in HEAD for plperl-vs-locale issue.
2006-01-05 00:55:36 +00:00
Tatsuo Ishii
951f2bdd23 Fix long standing Asian multibyte charsets bug.
See:

Subject: [HACKERS] bugs with certain Asian multibyte charsets
From: Tatsuo Ishii <ishii@sraoss.co.jp>
To: pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
Date: Sat, 24 Dec 2005 18:25:33 +0900 (JST)

for more details.
2005-12-24 12:08:10 +00:00
Tom Lane
cd726e1cf8 Adjust string comparison so that only bitwise-equal strings are considered
equal: if strcoll claims two strings are equal, check it with strcmp, and
sort according to strcmp if not identical.  This fixes inconsistent
behavior under glibc's hu_HU locale, and probably under some other locales
as well.  Also, take advantage of the now-well-defined behavior to speed up
texteq, textne, bpchareq, bpcharne: they may as well just do a bitwise
comparison and not bother with strcoll at all.

NOTE: affected databases may need to REINDEX indexes on text columns to be
sure they are self-consistent.
2005-12-22 22:50:29 +00:00
Tom Lane
237afd453f Fix longstanding race condition in transaction log management: there was a
very narrow window in which SimpleLruReadPage or SimpleLruWritePage could
think that I/O was needed when it wasn't (and indeed the buffer had already
been assigned to another page).  This would result in an Assert failure if
Asserts were enabled, and probably in silent data corruption if not.
Reported independently by Jim Nasby and Robert Creager.

I intend a more extensive fix when 8.2 development starts, but this is a
reasonably low-impact patch for the existing branches.
2005-11-03 00:23:57 +00:00
Tom Lane
aaaacf0f6c Fix longstanding bug that would sometimes let the planner generate a bad plan
for an outer join; symptom is bogus error "RIGHT JOIN is only supported with
merge-joinable join conditions".  Problem was that select_mergejoin_clauses
did its tests in the wrong order.  We need to force left join not right join
for a merge join when there are non-mergeable join clauses; but the test for
this only accounted for mergejoinability of the clause operator, and not
whether the left and right Vars were of the proper relations.  Per report
from Jean-Pierre Pelletier.
2005-10-25 20:30:52 +00:00
Tom Lane
0fa322a14e Pass a strdup'd ident string to openlog(), to ensure that reallocation
of GUC memory doesn't cause us to start emitting a bogus ident string.
Per report from Han Holl.  Also some trivial code cleanup in write_syslog.
2005-10-14 16:41:41 +00:00
Tom Lane
10f14e6e0d Fix longstanding bug found by Atsushi Ogawa: _bt_check_unique would mark
the wrong buffer dirty when trying to kill a dead index entry that's on
a page after the one it started on.  No risk of data corruption, just
inefficiency, but still a bug.
2005-10-12 17:18:45 +00:00
Teodor Sigaev
ba5f900b3d Fix missing rows in query
update a=.. where a... with GiST index on column 'a'
Backpatch from 8.0 branch
2005-08-30 08:48:16 +00:00
Tom Lane
26f1202ca3 Back-patch fixes for problems with VACUUM destroying t_ctid chains too soon,
and with insufficient paranoia in code that follows t_ctid links.
This patch covers the 7.3 branch.
2005-08-26 20:07:17 +00:00
Tom Lane
bec2f429af Reject operator names >= NAMEDATALEN characters. These will not work
anyway, and in assert-enabled builds you are likely to get an assertion
failure.  Backpatch as far as 7.3; 7.2 seems not to have the problem.
2005-08-16 00:48:58 +00:00
Tom Lane
577759f8bf Fix ancient memory leak in index_create(): RelationInitIndexAccessInfo
was being called twice in normal operation, leading to a leak of one set
of relcache subsidiary info.  Per report from Jeff Gold.
2005-06-25 16:54:30 +00:00
Tom Lane
d4b7dfacfa The random selection in function linear() could deliver a value equal to max
if geqo_rand() returns exactly 1.0, resulting in failure due to indexing
off the end of the pool array.  Also, since this is using inexact float math,
it seems wise to guard against roundoff error producing values slightly
outside the expected range.  Per report from bug@zedware.org.
2005-06-14 14:21:37 +00:00