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7173 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Heikki Linnakangas
e00a9a4c7b tests: Trim newline from result returned by BackgroundPsql->query
This went unnoticed, because only a few existing callers of
BackgroundPsql->query used the result, and the ones that did were not
bothered by an extra newline. I noticed because I was about to add a
new test that checks the result.

Backport to all supported versions, since I just backported the
BackgroundPsql facility to all supported versions too.
2024-06-27 21:10:27 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas
187b8991f7 Backport BackgroundPsql perl test module
Backport the new BackgroundPsql modules and the constructor functions,
background_psql() and interactive_psql, to all supported
branches. That makes it easier to backpatch tests that use it.

BackgroundPsql was introduced in version 16. On version 16, this
commit backports just the new timeout argument from master (commit
334f512f45). On older branches, the whole facility. This includes the
change to `use warnings FATAL => 'all'`, which we haven't otherwise
backported, but it seems good to keep the file identical across
branches.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/b7c64f20-ea01-4f15-9088-0cd6832af149@iki.fi
2024-06-27 19:00:59 +03:00
Tom Lane
4f19666762 Don't throw an error if a queued AFTER trigger no longer exists.
afterTriggerInvokeEvents and AfterTriggerExecute have always
treated it as an error if the trigger OID mentioned in a queued
after-trigger event can't be found.  However, that fails to
account for the edge case where the trigger's been dropped in
the current transaction since queueing the event.  There seems
no very good reason to disallow that case, so instead silently
do nothing if the trigger OID can't be found.

This does give up a little bit of bug-detection ability, but I don't
recall that these error messages have ever actually revealed a bug,
so it seems mostly theoretical.  Alternatives such as marking
pending events DONE at the time of dropping a trigger would be
complicated and perhaps introduce bugs of their own.

Per bug #18517 from Alexander Lakhin.  Back-patch to all
supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18517-af2d19882240902c@postgresql.org
2024-06-20 14:21:36 -04:00
Tom Lane
9cf4beb9e7 Clean out column-level pg_init_privs entries when dropping tables.
DeleteInitPrivs did not get the memo about how, when dropping a
whole object (with subid == 0), you should drop entries relating
to its sub-objects too.  This is visible in the test_pg_dump test
case if one drops the extension at the end: the entry for
	GRANT SELECT(col1) ON regress_pg_dump_table TO public;
was still present in pg_init_privs afterwards, although it was
pointing to a dangling table OID.

Noted while fooling with a fix for REASSIGN OWNED for pg_init_privs
entries.  This bug is aboriginal in the pg_init_privs feature
though, and there seems no reason not to back-patch the fix.
2024-06-14 16:20:35 -04:00
Tom Lane
086ecd12bc Fix parsing of ignored operators in websearch_to_tsquery().
The manual says clearly that punctuation in the input of
websearch_to_tsquery() is ignored, except for the special cases
of dashes and quotes.  However, this failed for cases like
"(foo bar) or something", or in general an ISOPERATOR character
in front of the "or".  We'd switch back to WAITOPERAND state,
then ignore the operator character while remaining in that state,
and then reach the "or" in WAITOPERAND state which (intentionally)
makes us treat it as data.

The fix is simple enough: if we see an ISOPERATOR character while in
WAITOPERATOR state, we have to skip it while staying in that state.
(We don't need to worry about other punctuation characters: those will
be consumed as though they were words, but then rejected by lexizing.)

In v14 and up (since commit eb086056f) we can simplify the code a bit
more too, because there is no longer a reason for the WAITOPERAND
state to distinguish between quoted and unquoted operands.

Per bug #18479 from Manos Emmanouilidis.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18479-d9b46e2fc242c33e@postgresql.org
2024-06-13 20:35:02 -04:00
Tom Lane
b188e1bf75 Fix infer_arbiter_indexes() to not assume resultRelation is 1.
infer_arbiter_indexes failed to renumber varnos in index expressions
or predicates that it got from the catalogs.  This escaped detection
up to now because the stored varnos in such trees will be 1, and an
INSERT's result relation is usually the first rangetable entry,
so that that was fine.  However, in cases such as inserting through
an updatable view, it's not fine, leading to failure to match the
expressions to the query with ensuing "there is no unique or exclusion
constraint matching the ON CONFLICT specification" errors.

Fix by copy-and-paste from get_relation_info().

Per bug #18502 from Michael Wang.  Back-patch to all supported
versions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18502-545b53f5b81e54e0@postgresql.org
2024-06-11 17:57:46 -04:00
Tom Lane
f1f6ded668 Tighten test_predtest's input checks, and improve error messages.
test_predtest() neglected to consider the possibility that
SPI_plan_get_cached_plan would return NULL.  This led to a core
dump if the input (incorrectly) contains more than one SQL
command.

While here, let's expend more than zero effort on the error
message for this case and nearby ones.

Per (half of) bug #18483 from Alexander Kozhemyakin.
Back-patch to all supported branches, not because this is
very significant (it's merely test scaffolding) but to make
our world a bit safer for fuzz testing.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18483-30bfff42de238000@postgresql.org
2024-06-07 16:45:56 -04:00
Tom Lane
bb331af4ae Fix failure with SQL-procedure polymorphic output arguments in v12.
Before the v13-era commit 913bbd88d, check_sql_fn_retval fails to
resolve polymorphic output types and then just throws up its hands and
assumes the check will be made at runtime.  I think that's true for
ordinary functions returning RECORD, but it doesn't happen in CALL,
potentially resulting in crashes if the actual output of the SQL
procedure's SELECT doesn't match the type inferred from polymorphism.
With a little bit of rearrangement, we can use get_call_result_type
instead of get_func_result_type and thereby infer the correct types.

I'm still unwilling to back-patch all of 913bbd88d, so if the types
don't match you'll get an error rather than perhaps silently inserting
a cast as v13 and later can.  That's consistent with prior behavior
though, so it seems fine.

Prior to 70ffb27b2, you'd typically get other errors due to other
shortcomings of CALL's management of polymorphism.  Nonetheless,
this is an independent bug.

Although there is no bug in v13 and up, it seems prudent to add
the test case for this to the newer branches too.  It's clearly
an under-tested area.

Per report from Andrew Bille.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJnzarw9EeWHAQRm76dXd=7j+rgw6ERqC=nCay8jeFqTwKwhqQ@mail.gmail.com
2024-06-06 15:16:56 -04:00
Dean Rasheed
b4e909082f Fix PL/pgSQL's handling of integer ranges containing underscores.
Commit faff8f8e47 allowed integer literals to contain underscores, but
failed to update the lexer's "numericfail" rule. As a result, a
decimal integer literal containing underscores would fail to parse, if
used in an integer range with no whitespace after the first number,
such as "1_001..1_003" in a PL/pgSQL FOR loop.

Fix and backpatch to v16, where support for underscores in integer
literals was added.

Report and patch by Erik Wienhold.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/808ce947-46ec-4628-85fa-3dd600b2c154%40ewie.name
2024-06-04 11:51:25 +01:00
Michael Paquier
338fb8714c Improve stability of subscription/029_on_error.pl
This test was failing when using wal_debug=on and -DWAL_DEBUG because of
additional log entries that made the test grab an LSN not mapping with
the error expected in the test.

Previously the test would look for the first matching line to get the
LSN to skip up to.  This is improved by having the test scan the logs
with a regexp that checks for the expected ERROR string, ensuring that
the wanted LSN comes from the correct context.

Backpatch down to 15 where this test has been introduced.

Author: Ian Ilyasov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/GV1P251MB100415F17E6B2FDD7188777ECDE32@GV1P251MB1004.EURP251.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM
Backpatch-through: 15
2024-05-24 11:21:27 +09:00
Tom Lane
019ea7675c Fix input of ISO "extended" time format for types time and timetz.
Commit 3e1a373e2 missed teaching DecodeTimeOnly the same "ptype"
manipulations it added to DecodeDateTime.  While likely harmless
at the time, it became a problem after 5b3c59535 added an error check
that ptype must be zero once we exit the parsing loop (that is, there
shouldn't be any unused prefixes).  The consequence was that we'd
reject time or timetz input like T12:34:56 (the "extended" format
per ISO 8601-1:2019), even though that still worked in timestamp
input.

Since this is clearly under-tested code, add test cases covering all
the ISO 8601 time formats.  (Note: although 8601 allows just "Thh",
we have never accepted that, and this patch doesn't change that.
I'm content to leave that as-is because it seems too likely to be
a mistake rather than intended input.  If anyone wants to allow
that, it should be a separate patch anyway, and not back-patched.)

Per bug #18470 from David Perez.  Back-patch to v16 where we
broke it.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18470-34fad4c829106848@postgresql.org
2024-05-22 18:22:51 -04:00
Tom Lane
2aa90c02dc Fix handling of extended expression statistics in CREATE TABLE LIKE.
transformTableLikeClause believed that it could process extended
statistics immediately because "the representation of CreateStatsStmt
doesn't depend on column numbers".  That was true when extended stats
were first introduced, but it was falsified by the addition of
extended stats on expressions: the parsed expression tree is fed
forward by the LIKE option, and that will contain Vars.  So if the
new table doesn't have attnums identical to the old one's (typically
because there are some dropped columns in the old one), that doesn't
work.  The CREATE goes through, but it emits invalid statistics
objects that will cause problems later.

Fortunately, we already have logic that can adapt expression trees
to the possibly-new column numbering.  To use it, we have to delay
processing of CREATE_TABLE_LIKE_STATISTICS into expandTableLikeClause,
just as for other LIKE options that involve expressions.

Per bug #18468 from Alexander Lakhin.  Back-patch to v14 where
extended statistics on expressions were added.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18468-f5add190e3fa5902@postgresql.org
2024-05-22 17:54:17 -04:00
Tom Lane
ce0d165446 Account for optimized MinMax aggregates during SS_finalize_plan.
We are capable of optimizing MIN() and MAX() aggregates on indexed
columns into subqueries that exploit the index, rather than the normal
thing of scanning the whole table.  When we do this, we replace the
Aggref node(s) with Params referencing subquery outputs.  Such Params
really ought to be included in the per-plan-node extParam/allParam
sets computed by SS_finalize_plan.  However, we've never done so
up to now because of an ancient implementation choice to perform
that substitution during set_plan_references, which runs after
SS_finalize_plan, so that SS_finalize_plan never sees these Params.

The cleanest fix would be to perform a separate tree walk to do
these substitutions before SS_finalize_plan runs.  That seems
unattractive, first because a whole-tree mutation pass is expensive,
and second because we lack infrastructure for visiting expression
subtrees in a Plan tree, so that we'd need a new function knowing
as much as SS_finalize_plan knows about that.  I also considered
swapping the order of SS_finalize_plan and set_plan_references,
but that fell foul of various assumptions that seem tricky to fix.
So the approach adopted here is to teach SS_finalize_plan itself
to check for such Aggrefs.  I refactored things a bit in setrefs.c
to avoid having three copies of the code that does that.

Back-patch of v17 commits d0d44049d and 779ac2c74.  When d0d44049d
went in, there was no evidence that it was fixing a reachable bug,
so I refrained from back-patching.  Now we have such evidence.

Per bug #18465 from Hal Takahara.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18465-2fae927718976b22@postgresql.org
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2391880.1689025003@sss.pgh.pa.us
2024-05-18 14:31:35 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
315661ecaf Re-forbid underscore in positional parameters
Underscores were added to numeric literals in faff8f8e47.  This change
also affected the positional parameters (e.g., $1) rule, which uses
the same production for its digits.  But this did not actually work,
because the digits for parameters are processed using atol(), which
does not handle underscores and ignores whatever it cannot parse.

The underscores notation is probably not useful for positional
parameters, so for simplicity revert that rule to its old form that
only accepts digits 0-9.

Author: Erik Wienhold <ewie@ewie.name>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/5d216d1c-91f6-4cbe-95e2-b4cbd930520c%40ewie.name
2024-05-15 13:54:00 +02:00
Tom Lane
8e0e99972a Fix handling of polymorphic output arguments for procedures.
Most of the infrastructure for procedure arguments was already
okay with polymorphic output arguments, but it turns out that
CallStmtResultDesc() was a few bricks shy of a load here.  It thought
all it needed to do was call build_function_result_tupdesc_t, but
that function specifically disclaims responsibility for resolving
polymorphic arguments.  Failing to handle that doesn't seem to be
a problem for CALL in plpgsql, but CALL from plain SQL would get
errors like "cannot display a value of type anyelement", or even
crash outright.

In v14 and later we can simply examine the exposed types of the
CallStmt.outargs nodes to get the right type OIDs.  But it's a lot
more complicated to fix in v12/v13, because those versions don't
have CallStmt.outargs, nor do they do expand_function_arguments
until ExecuteCallStmt runs.  We have to duplicatively run
expand_function_arguments, and then re-determine which elements
of the args list are output arguments.

Per bug #18463 from Drew Kimball.  Back-patch to all supported
versions, since it's busted in all of them.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18463-f8cd77e12564d8a2@postgresql.org
2024-05-14 20:19:20 -04:00
Nathan Bossart
c1664c8eef Fix pg_sequence_last_value() for unlogged sequences on standbys.
Presently, when this function is called for an unlogged sequence on
a standby server, it will error out with a message like

	ERROR:  could not open file "base/5/16388": No such file or directory

Since the pg_sequences system view uses pg_sequence_last_value(),
it can error similarly.  To fix, modify the function to return NULL
for unlogged sequences on standby servers.  Since this bug is
present on all versions since v15, this approach is preferable to
making the ERROR nicer because we need to repair the pg_sequences
view without modifying its definition on released versions.  For
consistency, this commit also modifies the function to return NULL
for other sessions' temporary sequences.  The pg_sequences view
already appropriately filters out such sequences, so there's no bug
there, but we might as well offer some defense in case someone
invokes this function directly.

Unlogged sequences were first introduced in v15, but temporary
sequences are much older, so while the fix for unlogged sequences
is only back-patched to v15, the temporary sequence portion is
back-patched to all supported versions.

We could also remove the privilege check in the pg_sequences view
definition in v18 if we modify this function to return NULL for
sequences for which the current user lacks privileges, but that is
left as a future exercise for when v18 development begins.

Reviewed-by: Tom Lane, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20240501005730.GA594666%40nathanxps13
Backpatch-through: 12
2024-05-13 15:54:04 -05:00
Nathan Bossart
2485a85e96 Fix privilege checks in pg_stats_ext and pg_stats_ext_exprs.
The catalog view pg_stats_ext fails to consider privileges for
expression statistics.  The catalog view pg_stats_ext_exprs fails
to consider privileges and row-level security policies.  To fix,
restrict the data in these views to table owners or roles that
inherit privileges of the table owner.  It may be possible to apply
less restrictive privilege checks in some cases, but that is left
as a future exercise.  Furthermore, for pg_stats_ext_exprs, do not
return data for tables with row-level security enabled, as is
already done for pg_stats_ext.

On the back-branches, a fix-CVE-2024-4317.sql script is provided
that will install into the "share" directory.  This file can be
used to apply the fix to existing clusters.

Bumps catversion on 'master' branch only.

Reported-by: Lukas Fittl
Reviewed-by: Noah Misch, Tomas Vondra, Tom Lane
Security: CVE-2024-4317
Backpatch-through: 14
2024-05-06 09:00:07 -05:00
David Rowley
9d36b883bf Disable run condition optimization for some WindowFuncs
94985c210 added code to detect when WindowFuncs were monotonic and
allowed additional quals to be "pushed down" into the subquery to be
used as WindowClause runConditions in order to short-circuit execution
in nodeWindowAgg.c.

The Node representation of runConditions wasn't well selected and
because we do qual pushdown before planning the subquery, the planning
of the subquery could perform subquery pull-up of nested subqueries.
For WindowFuncs with args, the arguments could be changed after pushing
the qual down to the subquery.

This was made more difficult by the fact that the code duplicated the
WindowFunc inside an OpExpr to include in the WindowClauses runCondition
field.  This could result in duplication of subqueries and a pull-up of
such a subquery could result in another initplan parameter being issued
for the 2nd version of the subplan.  This could result in errors such as:

ERROR:  WindowFunc not found in subplan target lists

Here in the backbranches, we don't have the flexibility to improve the
Node representation to resolve this, so instead we just disable the
runCondition optimization for ntile() unless the argument is a Const,
(v16 only) and likewise for count(expr) (both v15 and v16).  count(*) is
unaffected.  All other window functions which support this optimization
all take zero arguments and therefore are unaffected.

Bug: #18170
Reported-by: Zuming Jiang
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18170-f1d17bf9a0d58b24@postgresql.org
Backpatch-through 15 (master will be fixed independently)
2024-05-01 16:35:05 +12:00
David Rowley
68d3585450 Ensure we allocate NAMEDATALEN bytes for names in Index Only Scans
As an optimization, we store "name" columns as cstrings in btree
indexes.

Here we modify it so that Index Only Scans convert these cstrings back
to names with NAMEDATALEN bytes rather than storing the cstring in the
tuple slot, as was happening previously.

Bug: #17855
Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin
Reviewed-by: Alexander Lakhin, Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17855-5f523e0f9769a566@postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 12, all supported versions
2024-05-01 13:21:50 +12:00
Tom Lane
3752e3d210 Detect more overflows in timestamp[tz]_pl_interval.
In commit 25cd2d640 I (tgl) opined that "The additions of the months
and microseconds fields could also overflow, of course.  However,
I believe we need no additional checks there; the existing range
checks should catch such cases".  This is demonstrably wrong however
for the microseconds field, and given that discovery it seems prudent
to be paranoid about the months addition as well.

Report and patch by Joseph Koshakow.  As before, back-patch to all
supported branches.  (However, the test case doesn't work before
v15 because we didn't allow wider-than-int32 numbers in interval
literals.  A variant test could probably be built that fits within
that restriction, but it didn't seem worth the trouble.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAvxfHf77sRHKoEzUw9_cMYSpbpNS2C+J_+8Dq4+0oi8iKopeA@mail.gmail.com
2024-04-28 13:42:13 -04:00
Tom Lane
cc1eb6a3cc Fix type-checking of RECORD-returning functions in FROM, redux.
Commit 2ed8f9a01 intended to institute a policy that if a
RangeTblFunction has a coldeflist, then the function return type is
certainly RECORD, and we should use the coldeflist as the source of
truth about what the columns of the record type are.  When the
original function has been folded to a constant, inspection of the
constant might give a different answer.  This situation will lead to
a tuple-type-mismatch error at execution, but up until that point we
need to consistently believe the coldeflist, or we'll have problems
from different bits of code reaching different conclusions.

expandRTE didn't get that memo though, and would try to produce a
tupdesc based on the constant in this situation, leading to an
assertion failure.  (Desultory testing suggests that non-assert
builds often manage to give the expected error, although I also
saw a "cache lookup failed for type 0" error, and it seems at
least possible that a crash could happen.)

Some other callers of get_expr_result_type and get_expr_result_tupdesc
were also being incautious about this.  While none of them seem to
have actual bugs, they're working harder than necessary in this case,
besides which it seems safest to have an explicit policy of not using
those functions on an RTE with a coldeflist.  Adjust the code
accordingly, and add commentary to funcapi.c about this policy.

Also fix an obsolete comment that claimed "get_expr_result_type()
doesn't know how to extract type info from a RECORD constant".
That hasn't been true since commit d57534740.

Per bug #18422 from Alexander Lakhin.
As with the previous commit, back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18422-89ca86c8eac5246d@postgresql.org
2024-04-15 12:56:56 -04:00
Noah Misch
4e62ba21a9 freespace: Don't return blocks past the end of the main fork.
GetPageWithFreeSpace() callers assume the returned block exists in the
main fork, failing with "could not read block" errors if that doesn't
hold.  Make that assumption reliable now.  It hadn't been guaranteed,
due to the weak WAL and data ordering of participating components.  Most
operations on the fsm fork are not WAL-logged.  Relation extension is
not WAL-logged.  Hence, an fsm-fork block on disk can reference a
main-fork block that no WAL record has initialized.  That could happen
after an OS crash, a replica promote, or a PITR restore.  wal_log_hints
makes the trouble easier to hit; a replica promote or PITR ending just
after a relevant fsm-fork FPI_FOR_HINT may yield this broken state.  The
v16 RelationAddBlocks() mechanism also makes the trouble easier to hit,
since it bulk-extends even without extension lock waiters.  Commit
917dc7d239 stopped trouble around
truncation, but vectors involving PageIsNew() pages remained.

This implementation adds a RelationGetNumberOfBlocks() call when the
cached relation size doesn't confirm a block exists.  We've been unable
to identify a benchmark that slows materially, but this may show up as
additional time in lseek().  An alternative without that overhead would
be a new ReadBufferMode such that ReadBufferExtended() returns NULL
after a 0-byte read, with all other errors handled normally.  However,
each GetFreeIndexPage() caller would then need code for the return-NULL
case.  Back-patch to v14, due to earlier versions not caching relation
size and the absence of a pre-v16 problem report.

Ronan Dunklau.  Reported by Ronan Dunklau.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1878547.tdWV9SEqCh%40aivenlaptop
2024-04-13 08:35:06 -07:00
Tom Lane
48f216dc63 Fix plpgsql's handling of -- comments following expressions.
Up to now, read_sql_construct() has collected all the source text from
the statement or expression's initial token up to the character just
before the "until" token.  It normally tries to strip trailing
whitespace from that, largely for neatness.  If there was a "-- text"
comment after the expression, this resulted in removing the newline
that terminates the comment, which creates a hazard if we try to paste
the collected text into a larger SQL construct without inserting a
newline after it.  In particular this caused our handling of CASE
constructs to fail if there's a comment after a WHEN expression.

Commit 4adead1d2 noticed a similar problem with cursor arguments,
and worked around it through the rather crude hack of suppressing
the whitespace-trimming behavior for those.  Rather than do that
and leave the hazard open for future hackers to trip over, let's
fix it properly.  pl_scanner.c already has enough infrastructure
to report the end location of the expression's last token, so
we can copy up to that location and never collect any trailing
whitespace or comment to begin with.

Erik Wienhold and Tom Lane, per report from Michal Bartak.
Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAVzF_FjRoi8fOVuLCZhQJx6HATQ7MKm=aFOHWZODFnLmjX-xA@mail.gmail.com
2024-04-10 15:45:58 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
dfe402f955 Don't clobber test exit code at cleanup in LDAP/Kerberors tests
If the test script die()d before running the first test, the whole test
was interpreted as SKIPped rather than failed. The PostgreSQL::Cluster
module got this right.

Backpatch to all supported versions.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/fb898a70-3a88-4629-88e9-f2375020061d@iki.fi
2024-04-07 20:22:06 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas
854dd250ee Improve check in LDAP test to find the OpenLDAP installation
If the OpenLDAP installation directory is not found, set $setup to 0
so that the LDAP tests are skipped. The macOS checks were already
doing that, but the checks on other OS's were not. While we're at it,
improve the error message when the tests are skipped, to specify
whether the OS is supported at all, or if we just didn't find the
installation directory.

This was accidentally "working" without this, i.e. we were skipping
the tests if the OpenLDAP installation was not found, because of a bug
in the LdapServer test module: the END block clobbered the exit code
so if the script die()s before running the first subtest, the whole
test script was marked as SKIPped. The next commit will fix that bug,
but we need to fix the setup code first.

These checks should probably go into configure/meson, but this is
better than nothing and allows fixing the bug in the END block.

Backpatch to all supported versions.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/fb898a70-3a88-4629-88e9-f2375020061d@iki.fi
2024-04-07 20:22:00 +03:00
David Rowley
f5d0e86640 Fix unstable aggregate regression test
Buildfarm member avocet has shown a plan change by switching the
finalize aggregate stage to use a GroupAggregate rather than a
HashAggregate.  This is consistent with autovacuum having triggered on
the table, per analysis by Alexander Lakhin.

Fix this by disabling autovacuum on the table.

Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/d4493a28-589a-5328-fed5-250f2d7d3e2a@gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 16, where this test was added.
2024-03-28 00:14:17 +13:00
Tom Lane
7445f09281 Fix failure of ALTER FOREIGN TABLE SET SCHEMA to move sequences.
Ordinary ALTER TABLE SET SCHEMA will also move any owned sequences
into the new schema.  We failed to do likewise for foreign tables,
because AlterTableNamespaceInternal believed that only certain
relkinds could have indexes, owned sequences, or constraints.
We could simply add foreign tables to that relkind list, but it
seems likely that the same oversight could be made again in
future.  Instead let's remove the relkind filter altogether.
These functions shouldn't cost much when there are no objects
that they need to process, and surely this isn't an especially
performance-critical case anyway.

Per bug #18407 from Vidushi Gupta.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18407-4fd07373d252c6a0@postgresql.org
2024-03-26 15:28:16 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
1f4eb73420 Fix EXPLAIN Bitmap heap scan to count pages with no visible tuples
Previously, bitmap heap scans only counted lossy and exact pages for
explain when there was at least one visible tuple on the page.

heapam_scan_bitmap_next_block() returned true only if there was a
"valid" page with tuples to be processed. However, the lossy and exact
page counters in EXPLAIN should count the number of pages represented
in a lossy or non-lossy way in the constructed bitmap, regardless of
whether or not the pages ultimately contained visible tuples.

Backpatch to all supported versions.

Author: Melanie Plageman
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAAKRu_ZwCwWFeL_H3ia26bP2e7HiKLWt0ZmGXPVwPO6uXq0vaA@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAAKRu_bxrXeZ2rCnY8LyeC2Ls88KpjWrQ%2BopUrXDRXdcfwFZGA@mail.gmail.com
2024-03-18 14:04:13 +02:00
Dean Rasheed
34c854b93f Fix EXPLAIN output for subplans in MERGE.
Given a subplan in a MERGE query, EXPLAIN would sometimes fail to
properly display expressions involving Params referencing variables in
other parts of the plan tree.

This would affect subplans outside the topmost join plan node, for
which expansion of Params would go via the top-level ModifyTable plan
node.  The problem was that "inner_tlist" for the ModifyTable node's
deparse_namespace was set to the join node's targetlist, but
"inner_plan" was set to the ModifyTable node itself, rather than the
join node, leading to incorrect results when descending to the
referenced variable.

Fix and backpatch to v15, where MERGE was introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEZATCWAv-sZuH%2BwG5xJ-%2BGt7qGNGX8wUQd3XYydMFDKgRB9nw%40mail.gmail.com
2024-03-17 10:19:31 +00:00
Daniel Gustafsson
5643262999 Fix handling of expecteddir in pg_regress
Commit c855872074 introduced a new parameter to pg_regress to set
the directory where to look for expected files, but accidentally
only implemented it for when compiling pg_regress for ECPG tests.
Fix by adding support for the parameter to the main regression test
compilation of pg_regress as well.

Backpatch to v16 where --expecteddir was introduced.

Author: Anthonin Bonnefoy <anthonin.bonnefoy@datadoghq.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAO6_Xqq5yKJHcJsq__LPcKwSY0XHRqVERNWGxx5ttNXXj7+W=A@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 16
2024-03-15 17:02:07 +01:00
Tom Lane
52898c63e7 Make INSERT-from-multiple-VALUES-rows handle domain target columns.
Commit a3c7a993d fixed some cases involving target columns that are
arrays or composites by applying transformAssignedExpr to the VALUES
entries, and then stripping off any assignment ArrayRefs or
FieldStores that the transformation added.  But I forgot about domains
over arrays or composites :-(.  Such cases would either fail with
surprising complaints about mismatched datatypes, or insert unexpected
coercions that could lead to odd results.  To fix, extend the
stripping logic to get rid of CoerceToDomain if it's atop an ArrayRef
or FieldStore.

While poking at this, I realized that there's a poorly documented and
not-at-all-tested behavior nearby: we coerce each VALUES column to
the domain type separately, and rely on the rewriter to merge those
operations so that the domain constraints are checked only once.
If that merging did not happen, it's entirely possible that we'd get
unexpected domain constraint failures due to checking a
partially-updated container value.  There's no bug there, but while
we're here let's improve the commentary about it and add some test
cases that explicitly exercise that behavior.

Per bug #18393 from Pablo Kharo.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18393-65fedb1a0de9260d@postgresql.org
2024-03-14 14:57:16 -04:00
Tom Lane
40d1bdeb72 Fix confusion about the return rowtype of SQL-language procedures.
There is a very ancient hack in check_sql_fn_retval that allows a
single SELECT targetlist entry of composite type to be taken as
supplying all the output columns of a function returning composite.
(This is grotty and fundamentally ambiguous, but it's really hard
to do nested composite-returning functions without it.)

As far as I know, that doesn't cause any problems in ordinary
functions.  It's disastrous for procedures however.  All procedures
that have any output parameters are labeled with prorettype RECORD,
and the CALL code expects it will get back a record with one column
per output parameter, regardless of whether any of those parameters
is composite.  Doing something else leads to an assertion failure
or core dump.

This is simple enough to fix: we just need to not apply that rule
when considering procedures.  However, that requires adding another
argument to check_sql_fn_retval, which at least in principle might be
getting called by external callers.  Therefore, in the back branches
convert check_sql_fn_retval into an ABI-preserving wrapper around a
new function check_sql_fn_retval_ext.

Per report from Yahor Yuzefovich.  This has been broken since we
implemented procedures, so back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CABz5gWHSjj2df6uG0NRiDhZ_Uz=Y8t0FJP-_SVSsRsnrQT76Gg@mail.gmail.com
2024-03-12 18:16:10 -04:00
David Rowley
348233cb12 Fix incorrect accessing of pfree'd memory in Memoize
For pass-by-reference types, the code added in 0b053e78b, which aimed to
resolve a memory leak, was overly aggressive in resetting the per-tuple
memory context which could result in pfree'd memory being accessed
resulting in failing to find previously cached results in the hash
table.

What was happening was prepare_probe_slot() was switching to the
per-tuple memory context and calling ExecEvalExpr().  ExecEvalExpr() may
have required a memory allocation.  Both MemoizeHash_hash() and
MemoizeHash_equal() were aggressively resetting the per-tuple context
and after determining the hash value, the context would have gotten reset
before MemoizeHash_equal() was called.  This could have resulted in
MemoizeHash_equal() looking at pfree'd memory.

This is less likely to have caused issues on a production build as some
other allocation would have had to have reused the pfree'd memory to
overwrite it.  Otherwise, the original contents would have been intact.
However, this clearly caused issues on MEMORY_CONTEXT_CHECKING builds.

Author: Tender Wang, Andrei Lepikhov
Reported-by: Tender Wang (using SQLancer)
Reviewed-by: Andrei Lepikhov, Richard Guo, David Rowley
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHewXNnT6N6UJkya0z-jLFzVxcwGfeRQSfhiwA+NyLg-x8iGew@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 14, where Memoize was added
2024-03-11 18:20:39 +13:00
Dean Rasheed
dd73d10adf Fix handling of self-modified tuples in MERGE.
When an UPDATE or DELETE action in MERGE returns TM_SelfModified,
there are 2 possible causes:

1). The target tuple was already updated or deleted by the current
    command. This can happen if the target row joins to more than one
    source row, and the SQL standard explicitly says that this must be
    an error.

2). The target tuple was already updated or deleted by a later command
    in the current transaction. This can happen if the tuple is
    modified by a BEFORE trigger or a volatile function used in the
    query, and should be an error for the same reason that it is in a
    plain UPDATE or DELETE command.

In MERGE's primary error handling block, it failed to check for (2),
causing it to return a misleading error message in such cases.

In the secondary error handling block, following a concurrent update
from another session, it failed to check for (1), causing it to
silently ignore target rows joined to more than one source row,
instead of reporting an error.

Fix this, and add tests for both of these cases.

Per report from Wenjiang Zhang. Back-patch to v15, where MERGE was
introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/tencent_41DE0FF443FE14B94A5898D373792109E408%40qq.com
2024-03-07 09:55:39 +00:00
Michael Paquier
c46817ee51 Revert "Fix parallel-safety check of expressions and predicate for index builds"
This reverts commit eae7be600b, following a discussion with Tom Lane,
due to concerns that this impacts the decisions made by the planner for
the number of workers spawned based on the inlining and const-folding of
index expressions and predicate for cases that would have worked until
this commit.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/162802.1709746091@sss.pgh.pa.us
Backpatch-through: 12
2024-03-07 08:31:00 +09:00
Tom Lane
1b3029be5d Fix type-checking of RECORD-returning functions in FROM.
In the corner case where a function returning RECORD has been
simplified to a RECORD constant or an inlined ROW() expression,
ExecInitFunctionScan failed to cross-check the function's result
rowtype against the coldeflist provided by the calling query.
That happened because get_expr_result_type is able to extract a
tupdesc from such expressions, which led ExecInitFunctionScan to
ignore the coldeflist.  (Instead, it used the extracted tupdesc
to check the function's output, which of course always succeeds.)

I have not been able to demonstrate any really serious consequences
from this, because if some column of the result is of the wrong
type and is directly referenced by a Var of the calling query,
CheckVarSlotCompatibility will catch it.  However, we definitely do
fail to report the case where the function returns more columns than
the coldeflist expects, and in the converse case where it returns
fewer columns, we get an assert failure (but, seemingly, no worse
results in non-assert builds).

To fix, always build the expected tupdesc from the coldeflist if there
is one, and consult get_expr_result_type only when there isn't one.

Also remove the failing Assert, even though it is no longer reached
after this fix.  It doesn't seem to be adding anything useful, since
later checking will deal with cases with the wrong number of columns.

The only other place I could find that is doing something similar
is inline_set_returning_function.  There's no live bug there because
we cannot be looking at a Const or RowExpr, but for consistency
change that code to agree with ExecInitFunctionScan.

Per report from PetSerAl.  After some debate I've concluded that
this should be back-patched.  There is a small risk that somebody
has been relying on such a case not throwing an error, but I judge
this outweighed by the risk that I've missed some way in which the
failure to cross-check has worse consequences than sketched above.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKygsHSerA1eXsJHR9wft3Gn3wfHQ5RfP8XHBzF70_qcrrRvEg@mail.gmail.com
2024-03-06 14:41:13 -05:00
Michael Paquier
4ec8f7708b Fix parallel-safety check of expressions and predicate for index builds
As coded, the planner logic that calculates the number of parallel
workers to use for a parallel index build uses expressions and
predicates from the relcache, which are flattened for the planner by
eval_const_expressions().

As reported in the bug, an immutable parallel-unsafe function flattened
in the relcache would become a Const, which would be considered as
parallel-safe, even if the predicate or the expressions including the
function are not safe in parallel workers.  Depending on the expressions
or predicate used, this could cause the parallel build to fail.

Tests are included that check parallel index builds with parallel-unsafe
predicate and expressions.  Two routines are added to lsyscache.h to be
able to retrieve expressions and predicate of an index from its pg_index
data.

Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin
Author: Tender Wang
Reviewed-by: Jian He, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHewXN=UaAaNn9ruHDH3Os8kxLVmtWqbssnf=dZN_s9=evHUFA@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 12
2024-03-06 17:24:05 +09:00
Tom Lane
17db5436ef Fix mis-rounding and overflow hazards in date_bin().
In the case where the target timestamp is before the origin timestamp
and their difference is already an exact multiple of the stride, the
code incorrectly subtracted the stride anyway.

Also detect several integer-overflow cases that previously produced
bogus results.  (The submitted patch tried to avoid overflow, but
I'm not convinced it's right, and problematic cases are so far out of
the plausibly-useful range that they don't seem worth sweating over.
Let's just use overflow-detecting arithmetic and throw errors.)

timestamp_bin() and timestamptz_bin() are basically identical and
so had identical bugs.  Fix both.

Report and patch by Moaaz Assali, adjusted some by me.  Back-patch
to v14 where date_bin() was introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALkF+nvtuas-2kydG-WfofbRSJpyODAJWun==W-yO5j2R4meqA@mail.gmail.com
2024-02-28 14:00:30 -05:00
Amit Kapila
22cecaddf7 Back-patch test modifications that were done as part of b6df0798a5.
This commit fixes the intermittent buildfarm failures in 031_column_list.
I missed to back-patch while committing b6df0798a5 in the HEAD.

Diagnosed-by: Amit Kapila
Author: Vignesh C
Backpatch-through: 15
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3307255.1706911634@sss.pgh.pa.us
2024-02-26 09:33:57 +05:30
Alvaro Herrera
a3f5d2056c
MERGE ... DO NOTHING: require SELECT privileges
Verify that a user running MERGE with a DO NOTHING clause has
privileges to read the table, even if no columns are referenced.  Such
privileges were already required if the ON clause or any of the WHEN
conditions referenced any column at all, so there's no functional change
in practice.

This change fixes an assertion failure in the case where no column is
referenced by the command and the WHEN clauses are all DO NOTHING.

Backpatch to 15, where MERGE was introduced.

Reported-by: Alena Rybakina <a.rybakina@postgrespro.ru>
Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin <exclusion@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4d65a385-7efa-4436-a825-0869f89d9d92@postgrespro.ru
2024-02-21 17:18:52 +01:00
David Rowley
fb95cc72bf Fix incorrect pruning of NULL partition for boolean IS NOT clauses
Partition pruning wrongly assumed that, for a table partitioned on a
boolean column, a clause in the form "boolcol IS NOT false" and "boolcol
IS NOT true" could be inverted to correspondingly become "boolcol IS true"
and "boolcol IS false".  These are not equivalent as the NOT version
matches the opposite boolean value *and* NULLs.  This incorrect assumption
meant that partition pruning pruned away partitions that could contain
NULL values.

Here we fix this by correctly not pruning partitions which could store
NULLs.

To be affected by this, the table must be partitioned by a NULLable boolean
column and queries would have to contain "boolcol IS NOT false" or "boolcol
IS NOT true".  This could result in queries filtering out NULL values
with a LIST partitioned table and "ERROR:  invalid strategy number 0"
for RANGE and HASH partitioned tables.

Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin
Bug: #18344
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18344-8d3f00bada6d09c6@postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 12
2024-02-20 12:50:09 +13:00
Noah Misch
c59a97313b Fix test race between primary XLOG_RUNNING_XACTS and standby logical slot.
Before the previous commit, the test could hang until
LOG_SNAPSHOT_INTERVAL_MS (15s), until checkpoint_timeout (300s), or
indefinitely.  An indefinite hang was awfully improbable.  It entailed
the test reaching checkpoint_timeout before the
DecodingContextFindStartpoint() of a CREATE SUBSCRIPTION, yet after the
preceding WAL record.  Back-patch to v16, which introduced the test.

Bertrand Drouvot, reported by Noah Misch.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20240211010227.a2.nmisch@google.com
2024-02-19 12:52:49 -08:00
Noah Misch
f024746484 Bound waits in 035_standby_logical_decoding.pl.
One IPC::Run::start() used an IPC::Run::timer() without checking for
expiration.  The other used no timeout or timer.  Back-patch to v16,
which introduced the test.

Reviewed by Bertrand Drouvot.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20240211010227.a2.nmisch@google.com
2024-02-19 12:52:48 -08:00
Tom Lane
f15d01cb5d Use a safer outfuncs/readfuncs representation for BitStrings.
For a long time, our outfuncs.c code has supposed that the string
contents of a BitString node could just be printed literally with
no concern for quoting/escaping.  Now, that's okay if the string
literal contains only valid binary or hex digits ... but our lexer
doesn't check that, preferring to let bitin() be the sole authority
on what's valid.  So we could have raw parse trees that contain
incorrect BitString literals, and that can result in failures when
WRITE_READ_PARSE_PLAN_TREES debugging is enabled.

Fix by using outToken() to print the string field, and debackslash()
to read it.  This results in a change in the emitted representation
only in cases that would have failed before, and don't represent valid
SQL in the first place.  Between that and the fact that we don't store
raw parse trees in the catalogs, I judge this safe to apply without a
catversion bump.

Per bug #18340 from Alexander Lakhin.  Back-patch to v16; before that,
we lacked readfuncs support for BitString nodes, so that the problem
was only cosmetic.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18340-4aa1ae6ed4121912@postgresql.org
2024-02-13 12:18:25 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
86d2b434c9 Fix propagation of persistence to sequences in ALTER TABLE / ADD COLUMN
Fix for 344d62fb9a: That commit introduced unlogged sequences and
made it so that identity/serial sequences automatically get the
persistence level of their owning table.  But this works only for
CREATE TABLE and not for ALTER TABLE / ADD COLUMN.  The latter would
always create the sequence as logged (default), independent of the
persistence setting of the table.  This is fixed here.

Note: It is allowed to change the persistence of identity sequences
directly using ALTER SEQUENCE.  So mistakes in existing databases can
be fixed manually.

Reviewed-by: Ashutosh Bapat <ashutosh.bapat.oss@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/c4b6e2ed-bcdf-4ea7-965f-e49761094827%40eisentraut.org
2024-02-09 08:09:59 +01:00
Heikki Linnakangas
fb3836855c Fix assertion if index is dropped during REFRESH CONCURRENTLY
When assertions are disabled, the built SQL statement is invalid and
you get a "syntax error". So this isn't a serious problem, but let's
avoid the assertion failure.

Backpatch to all supported versions.

Reviewed-by: Noah Misch
2024-02-05 11:03:03 +02:00
Tom Lane
62f1202031 Apply band-aid fix for an oversight in reparameterize_path_by_child.
The path we wish to reparameterize is not a standalone object:
in particular, it implicitly references baserestrictinfo clauses
in the associated RelOptInfo, and if it's a SampleScan path then
there is also the TableSampleClause in the RTE to worry about.
Both of those could contain lateral references to the join partner
relation, which would need to be modified to refer to its child.
Since we aren't doing that, affected queries can give wrong answers,
or odd failures such as "variable not found in subplan target list",
or executor crashes.  But we can't just summarily modify those
expressions, because they are shared with other paths for the rel.
We'd break things if we modify them and then end up using some
non-partitioned-join path.

In HEAD, we plan to fix this by postponing reparameterization
until create_plan(), when we know that those other paths are
no longer of interest, and then adjusting those expressions along
with the ones in the path itself.  That seems like too big a change
for stable branches however.  In the back branches, let's just detect
whether any troublesome lateral references actually exist in those
expressions, and fail reparameterization if so.  This will result in
not performing a partitioned join in such cases.  Given the lack of
field complaints, nobody's likely to miss the optimization.

Report and patch by Richard Guo.  Apply to 12-16 only, since
the intended fix for HEAD looks quite different.  We're not quite
ready to push the HEAD fix, but with back-branch releases coming
up soon, it seems wise to get this stopgap fix in place there.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMbWs496+N=UAjOc=rcD3P7B6oJe4rZw08e_TZRUsWbPxZW3Tw@mail.gmail.com
2024-02-01 12:34:21 -05:00
Michael Paquier
f33e83285a Fix various issues with ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION
This commit addresses a set of issues when changing token type mappings
in a text search configuration when using duplicated token names:
- ADD MAPPING would fail on insertion because of a constraint failure
after inserting the same mapping.
- ALTER MAPPING with an "overridden" configuration failed with "tuple
already updated by self" when the token mappings are removed.
- DROP MAPPING failed with "tuple already updated by self", like
previously, but in a different code path.

The code is refactored so the token names (with their numbers) are
handled as a List with unique members rather than an array with numbers,
ensuring that no duplicates mess up with the catalog inserts, updates
and deletes.  The list is generated by getTokenTypes(), with the same
error handling as previously while duplicated tokens are discarded from
the list used to work on the catalogs.

Regression tests are expanded to cover much more ground for the cases
fixed by this commit, as there was no coverage for the code touched in
this commit.  A bit more is done regarding the fact that a token name
not supported by a configuration's parser should result in an error even
if IF EXISTS is used in a DROP MAPPING clause.  This is implied in the
code but there was no coverage for that, and it was very easy to miss.

These issues exist since at least their introduction in core with
140d4ebcb4, so backpatch all the way down.

Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin
Author: Tender Wang, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18310-1eb233c5908189c8@postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 12
2024-01-31 13:16:43 +09:00
Michael Paquier
f57a580fd2 Fix DROP ROLE when specifying duplicated roles
This commit fixes failures with "tuple already updated by self" when
listing twice the same role and in a DROP ROLE query.

This is an oversight in 6566133c5f, that has introduced a two-phase
logic in DropRole() where dependencies of all the roles to drop are
removed in a first phase, with the roles themselves removed from
pg_authid in a second phase.

The code is simplified to not rely on a List of ObjectAddress built in
the first phase used to remove the pg_authid entries in the second
phase, switching to a list of OIDs.  Duplicated OIDs can be simply
avoided in the first phase thanks to that.  Using ObjectAddress was not
necessary for the roles as they are not used for anything specific to
dependency.c, building all the ObjectAddress in the List with
AuthIdRelationId as class ID.

In 15 and older versions, where a single phase is used, DROP ROLE with
duplicated role names would fail on "role \"blah\" does not exist" for
the second entry after the CCI() done by the first deletion.  This is
not really incorrect, but it does not seem worth changing based on a
lack of complaints.

Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin
Reviewed-by: Tender Wang
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18310-1eb233c5908189c8@postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 16
2024-01-29 08:06:03 +09:00
Tom Lane
7204aea835 Detect Julian-date overflow in timestamp[tz]_pl_interval.
We perform addition of the days field of an interval via
arithmetic on the Julian-date representation of the timestamp's date.
This step is subject to int32 overflow, and we also should not let
the Julian date become very negative, for fear of weird results from
j2date.  (In the timestamptz case, allow a Julian date of -1 to pass,
since it might convert back to zero after timezone rotation.)

The additions of the months and microseconds fields could also
overflow, of course.  However, I believe we need no additional
checks there; the existing range checks should catch such cases.
The difficulty here is that j2date's magic modular arithmetic could
produce something that looks like it's in-range.

Per bug #18313 from Christian Maurer.  This has been wrong for
a long time, so back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18313-64d2c8952d81e84b@postgresql.org
2024-01-26 13:39:37 -05:00