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24528 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane
952e33b052 Fix order of arguments to SubTransSetParent().
ProcessTwoPhaseBuffer (formerly StandbyRecoverPreparedTransactions)
mixed up the parent and child XIDs when calling SubTransSetParent to
record the transactions' relationship in pg_subtrans.

Remarkably, analysis by Simon Riggs suggests that this doesn't lead to
visible problems (at least, not in non-Assert builds).  That might
explain why we'd not noticed it before.  Nonetheless, it's surely wrong.

This code was born broken, so back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20110.1492905318@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-04-23 13:10:58 -04:00
Tom Lane
ad8fb69ccc Avoid depending on non-POSIX behavior of fcntl(2).
The POSIX standard does not say that the success return value for
fcntl(F_SETFD) and fcntl(F_SETFL) is zero; it says only that it's not -1.
We had several calls that were making the stronger assumption.  Adjust
them to test specifically for -1 for strict spec compliance.

The standard further leaves open the possibility that the O_NONBLOCK
flag bit is not the only active one in F_SETFL's argument.  Formally,
therefore, one ought to get the current flags with F_GETFL and store
them back with only the O_NONBLOCK bit changed when trying to change
the nonblock state.  In port/noblock.c, we were doing the full pushup
in pg_set_block but not in pg_set_noblock, which is just weird.  Make
both of them do it properly, since they have little business making
any assumptions about the socket they're handed.  The other places
where we're issuing F_SETFL are working with FDs we just got from
pipe(2), so it's reasonable to assume the FDs' properties are all
default, so I didn't bother adding F_GETFL steps there.

Also, while pg_set_block deserves some points for trying to do things
right, somebody had decided that it'd be even better to cast fcntl's
third argument to "long".  Which is completely loony, because POSIX
clearly says the third argument for an F_SETFL call is "int".

Given the lack of field complaints, these missteps apparently are not
of significance on any common platforms.  But they're still wrong,
so back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/30882.1492800880@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-04-21 15:55:56 -04:00
Tom Lane
fb50c38e9c Support OpenSSL 1.1.0 in 9.3 and 9.2.
This commit back-patches the equivalent of the 9.5-branch commits
e2838c580 and 48e5ba61e, so that we can work with OpenSSL 1.1.0
in all supported branches.

Original patches by Andreas Karlsson and Heikki Linnakangas,
back-patching work by Andreas Karlsson.

Patch: https://postgr.es/m/0c817abb-3f7d-20fb-583a-58f7593a0bea@proxel.se
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5129.1492293840@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-04-17 13:52:42 -04:00
Tom Lane
58384149bd Back-patch 9.4-era SSL renegotiation code into 9.3 and 9.2.
This back-patches 9.4 commits 31cf1a1a4, 86029b31e, and 36a3be654 into
the prior branches, along with relevant bits of b1aebbb6a and 7ce2a45ae.
We had foreseen doing this once the code was proven, but that never did
happen, probably because we got sufficiently fed up with renegotiation
to disable it by default.  However, we have to do something now because
the prior code doesn't even compile against OpenSSL 1.1.  Per discussion,
the best solution seems to be to make the older branches look like 9.4.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20047.1492305247@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-04-17 12:51:40 -04:00
Tom Lane
0d7591c67d Provide a way to control SysV shmem attach address in EXEC_BACKEND builds.
In standard non-Windows builds, there's no particular reason to care what
address the kernel chooses to map the shared memory segment at.  However,
when building with EXEC_BACKEND, there's a risk that the chosen address
won't be available in all child processes.  Linux with ASLR enabled (which
it is by default) seems particularly at risk because it puts shmem segments
into the same area where it maps shared libraries.  We can work around
that by specifying a mapping address that's outside the range where
shared libraries could get mapped.  On x86_64 Linux, 0x7e0000000000
seems to work well.

This is only meant for testing/debugging purposes, so it doesn't seem
necessary to go as far as providing a GUC (or any user-visible
documentation, though we might change that later).  Instead, it's just
controlled by setting an environment variable PG_SHMEM_ADDR to the
desired attach address.

Back-patch to all supported branches, since the point here is to
remove intermittent buildfarm failures on EXEC_BACKEND animals.
Owners of affected animals will need to add a suitable setting of
PG_SHMEM_ADDR to their build_env configuration.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7036.1492231361@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-04-15 17:28:21 -04:00
Tom Lane
ba0a0f3ed9 Improve castNode notation by introducing list-extraction-specific variants.
This extends the castNode() notation introduced by commit 5bcab1114 to
provide, in one step, extraction of a list cell's pointer and coercion to
a concrete node type.  For example, "lfirst_node(Foo, lc)" is the same
as "castNode(Foo, lfirst(lc))".  Almost half of the uses of castNode
that have appeared so far include a list extraction call, so this is
pretty widely useful, and it saves a few more keystrokes compared to the
old way.

As with the previous patch, back-patch the addition of these macros to
pg_list.h, so that the notation will be available when back-patching.

Patch by me, after an idea of Andrew Gierth's.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/14197.1491841216@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-04-10 13:51:29 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
f2389f119f Remove dead code and fix comments in fast-path function handling.
HandleFunctionRequest() is no longer responsible for reading the protocol
message from the client, since commit 2b3a8b20c2. Fix the outdated
comments.

HandleFunctionRequest() now always returns 0, because the code that used
to return EOF was moved in 2b3a8b20c2. Therefore, the caller no longer
needs to check the return value.

Reported by Andres Freund. Backpatch to all supported versions, even though
this doesn't have any user-visible effect, to make backporting future
patches in this area easier.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20170405010525.rt5azbya5fkbhvrx@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-04-06 09:11:26 +03:00
Tom Lane
5fe937f38b Fix unportable disregard of alignment requirements in RADIUS code.
The compiler is entitled to store a char[] local variable with no
particular alignment requirement.  Our RADIUS code cavalierly took such
a local variable and cast its address to a struct type that does have
alignment requirements.  On an alignment-picky machine this would lead
to bus errors.  To fix, declare the local variable honestly, and then
cast its address to char * for use in the I/O calls.

Given the lack of field complaints, there must be very few if any
people affected; but nonetheless this is a clear portability issue,
so back-patch to all supported branches.

Noted while looking at a Coverity complaint in the same code.
2017-03-26 17:35:35 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
8ae3ff64be Revert Windows service check refactoring, and replace with a different fix.
This reverts commit 38bdba54a6, "Fix and
simplify check for whether we're running as Windows service". It turns out
that older versions of MinGW - like that on buildfarm member narwhal - do
not support the CheckTokenMembership() function. This replaces the
refactoring with a much smaller fix, to add a check for SE_GROUP_ENABLED to
pgwin32_is_service().

Only apply to back-branches, and keep the refactoring in HEAD. It's
unlikely that anyone is still really using such an old version of MinGW -
aside from narwhal - but let's not change the minimum requirements in
minor releases.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/16609.1489773427@sss.pgh.pa.us
Patch: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAB7nPqSvfu%3DKpJ%3DNX%2BYAHmgAmQdzA7N5h31BjzXeMgczhGCC%2BQ%40mail.gmail.com
2017-03-24 12:39:01 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas
9c52ddfcee Fix and simplify check for whether we're running as Windows service.
If the process token contains SECURITY_SERVICE_RID, but it has been
disabled by the SE_GROUP_USE_FOR_DENY_ONLY attribute, win32_is_service()
would incorrectly report that we're running as a service. That situation
arises, e.g. if postmaster is launched with a restricted security token,
with the "Log in as Service" privilege explicitly removed.

Replace the broken code with CheckProcessTokenMembership(), which does
this correctly. Also replace similar code in win32_is_admin(), even
though it got this right, for simplicity and consistency.

Per bug #13755, reported by Breen Hagan. Back-patch to all supported
versions. Patch by Takayuki Tsunakawa, reviewed by Michael Paquier.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20151104062315.2745.67143%40wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-03-17 11:14:58 +02:00
Andrew Gierth
a494ff4b01 Avoid having vacuum set reltuples to 0 on non-empty relations in the
presence of page pins, which leads to serious estimation errors in the
planner.  This particularly affects small heavily-accessed tables,
especially where locking (e.g. from FK constraints) forces frequent
vacuums for mxid cleanup.

Fix by keeping separate track of pages whose live tuples were actually
counted vs. pages that were only scanned for freezing purposes.  Thus,
reltuples can only be set to 0 if all pages of the relation were
actually counted.

Backpatch to all supported versions.

Per bug #14057 from Nicolas Baccelli, analyzed by me.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20160331103739.8956.94469@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-03-16 22:33:38 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut
28fb0f10c9 Spelling fixes
From: Josh Soref <jsoref@gmail.com>
2017-03-14 13:45:42 -04:00
Robert Haas
b2ae1d6c4d Fix failure to mark init buffers as BM_PERMANENT.
This could result in corruption of the init fork of an unlogged index
if the ambuildempty routine for that index used shared buffers to
create the init fork, which was true for brin, gin, gist, and hash
indexes.

Patch by me, based on an earlier patch by Michael Paquier, who also
reviewed this one.  This also incorporates an idea from Artur
Zakirov.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CACYUyc8yccE4xfxhqxfh_Mh38j7dRFuxfaK1p6dSNAEUakxUyQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-03-14 12:10:36 -04:00
Tom Lane
f6396dce0f Remove unnecessary dependency on statement_timeout in prepared_xacts test.
Rather than waiting around for statement_timeout to expire, we can just
try to take the table's lock in nowait mode.  This saves some fraction
under 4 seconds when running this test with prepared xacts available,
and it guards against timeout-expired-anyway failures on very slow
machines when prepared xacts are not available, as seen in a recent
failure on axolotl for instance.

This approach could fail if autovacuum were to take an exclusive lock
on the test table concurrently, but there's no reason for it to do so.

Since the main point here is to improve stability in the buildfarm,
back-patch to all supported branches.
2017-03-13 16:47:08 -04:00
Michael Meskes
d8c207437a Ecpg should support COMMIT PREPARED and ROLLBACK PREPARED.
The problem was that "begin transaction" was issued automatically
before executing COMMIT/ROLLBACK PREPARED if not in auto commit. This fix by
Masahiko Sawada fixes this.
2017-03-13 20:52:16 +01:00
Tom Lane
e6d2ba4195 Sanitize newlines in object names in "pg_restore -l" output.
Commits 89e0bac86 et al replaced newlines with spaces in object names
printed in SQL comments, but we neglected to consider that the same
names are also printed by "pg_restore -l", and a newline would render
the output unparseable by "pg_restore -L".  Apply the same replacement
in "-l" output.  Since "pg_restore -L" doesn't actually examine any
object names, only the dump ID field that starts each line, this is
enough to fix things for its purposes.

The previous fix was treated as a security issue, and we might have
done that here as well, except that the issue was reported publicly
to start with.  Anyway it's hard to see how this could be exploited
for SQL injection; "pg_restore -L" doesn't do much with the file
except parse it for leading integers.

Per bug #14587 from Milos Urbanek.  Back-patch to all supported versions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170310155318.1425.30483@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-03-10 14:15:09 -05:00
Michael Meskes
731afc91f0 Fix a potential double-free in ecpg. 2017-03-10 10:52:01 +01:00
Tom Lane
52f6b2e5a6 Fix timestamptz regression test to still work with latest IANA zone data.
The IANA timezone crew continues to chip away at their project of removing
timezone abbreviations that have no real-world currency from their
database.  The tzdata2017a update removes all such abbreviations for
South American zones, as well as much of the Pacific.  This breaks some
test cases in timestamptz.sql that were expecting America/Santiago and
America/Caracas to have non-numeric abbreviations.

The test cases involving America/Santiago seem to have selected that
zone more or less at random, so just replace it with America/New_York,
which is of similar longitude.  The cases involving America/Caracas are
harder since they were chosen to test a time-varying zone abbreviation
around a point where it changed meaning in the backwards direction.
Fortunately, Europe/Moscow has a similar case in 2014, and the MSK/MSD
abbreviations are well enough attested that IANA seems unlikely to
decide to remove them from the database in future.

With these changes, this regression test should pass when using any IANA
zone database from 2015 or later.  One could wish that there were a few
years more daylight on how out-of-date your zone database can be ... but
really the --with-system-tzdata option is only meant for use on platforms
where the zone database is kept up-to-date pretty faithfully, so I do not
think this is a big objection.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/6749.1489087470@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-03-09 17:20:11 -05:00
Tom Lane
0ab75448ea Repair incorrect pg_dump labeling for some comments and security labels.
We attached no schema label to comments for procedural languages, casts,
transforms, operator classes, operator families, or text search objects.
The first three categories of objects don't really have schemas, but
pg_dump treats them as if they do, and it seems like the TocEntry fields
for their comments had better match the TocEntry fields for the parent
objects.  (As an example of a possible hazard, the type names in a CAST
will be formatted with the assumption of a particular search_path, so
failing to ensure that this same path is active for the COMMENT ON command
could lead to an error or to attaching the comment to the wrong cast.)
In the last six cases, this was a flat-out error --- possibly mine to
begin with, but it was a long time ago.

The security label for a procedural language was likewise not correctly
labeled as to schema, and both the comment and security label for a
procedural language were not correctly labeled as to owner.

In simple cases the restore would accidentally work correctly anyway, since
these comments and security labels would normally get emitted right after
the owning object, and so the search path and active user would be correct
anyhow.  But it could fail in corner cases; for example a schema-selective
restore would omit comments it should include.

Giuseppe Broccolo noted the oversight, and proposed the correct fix, for
text search dictionary objects; I found the rest by cross-checking other
dumpComment() calls.  These oversights are ancient, so back-patch all
the way.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFzmHiWwwzLjzwM4x5ki5s_PDMR6NrkipZkjNnO3B0xEpBgJaA@mail.gmail.com
2017-03-06 19:33:59 -05:00
Stephen Frost
e864cd25b4 pg_upgrade: Fix large object COMMENTS, SECURITY LABELS
When performing a pg_upgrade, we copy the files behind pg_largeobject
and pg_largeobject_metadata, allowing us to avoid having to dump out and
reload the actual data for large objects and their ACLs.

Unfortunately, that isn't all of the information which can be associated
with large objects.  Currently, we also support COMMENTs and SECURITY
LABELs with large objects and these were being silently dropped during a
pg_upgrade as pg_dump would skip everything having to do with a large
object and pg_upgrade only copied the tables mentioned to the new
cluster.

As the file copies happen after the catalog dump and reload, we can't
simply include the COMMENTs and SECURITY LABELs in pg_dump's binary-mode
output but we also have to include the actual large object definition as
well.  With the definition, comments, and security labels in the pg_dump
output and the file copies performed by pg_upgrade, all of the data and
metadata associated with large objects is able to be successfully pulled
forward across a pg_upgrade.

In 9.6 and master, we can simply adjust the dump bitmask to indicate
which components we don't want.  In 9.5 and earlier, we have to put
explciit checks in in dumpBlob() and dumpBlobs() to not include the ACL
or the data when in binary-upgrade mode.

Adjustments made to the privileges regression test to allow another test
(large_object.sql) to be added which explicitly leaves a large object
with a comment in place to provide coverage of that case with
pg_upgrade.

Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170221162655.GE9812@tamriel.snowman.net
2017-03-06 17:04:55 -05:00
Tom Lane
775227590d Fix sloppy handling of corner-case errors in fd.c.
Several places in fd.c had badly-thought-through handling of error returns
from lseek() and close().  The fact that those would seldom fail on valid
FDs is probably the reason we've not noticed this up to now; but if they
did fail, we'd get quite confused.

LruDelete and LruInsert actually just Assert'd that lseek never fails,
which is pretty awful on its face.

In LruDelete, we indeed can't throw an error, because that's likely to get
called during error abort and so throwing an error would probably just lead
to an infinite loop.  But by the same token, throwing an error from the
close() right after that was ill-advised, not to mention that it would've
left the LRU state corrupted since we'd already unlinked the VFD from the
list.  I also noticed that really, most of the time, we should know the
current seek position and it shouldn't be necessary to do an lseek here at
all.  As patched, if we don't have a seek position and an lseek attempt
doesn't give us one, we'll close the file but then subsequent re-open
attempts will fail (except in the somewhat-unlikely case that a
FileSeek(SEEK_SET) call comes between and allows us to re-establish a known
target seek position).  This isn't great but it won't result in any state
corruption.

Meanwhile, having an Assert instead of an honest test in LruInsert is
really dangerous: if that lseek failed, a subsequent read or write would
read or write from the start of the file, not where the caller expected,
leading to data corruption.

In both LruDelete and FileClose, if close() fails, just LOG that and mark
the VFD closed anyway.  Possibly leaking an FD is preferable to getting
into an infinite loop or corrupting the VFD list.  Besides, as far as I can
tell from the POSIX spec, it's unspecified whether or not the file has been
closed, so treating it as still open could be the wrong thing anyhow.

I also fixed a number of other places that were being sloppy about
behaving correctly when the seekPos is unknown.

Also, I changed FileSeek to return -1 with EINVAL for the cases where it
detects a bad offset, rather than throwing a hard elog(ERROR).  It seemed
pretty inconsistent that some bad-offset cases would get a failure return
while others got elog(ERROR).  It was missing an offset validity check for
the SEEK_CUR case on a closed file, too.

Back-patch to all supported branches, since all this code is fundamentally
identical in all of them.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2982.1487617365@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-02-21 17:51:28 -05:00
Tom Lane
365db6b68e Make src/interfaces/libpq/test clean up after itself.
It failed to remove a .o file during "make clean", and it lacked
a .gitignore file entirely.
2017-02-19 17:18:55 -05:00
Tom Lane
5b5b2fb403 Adjust PL/Tcl regression test to dodge a possible bug or zone dependency.
One case in the PL/Tcl tests is observed to fail on RHEL5 with a Turkish
time zone setting.  It's not clear if this is an old Tcl bug or something
odd about the zone data, but in any case that test is meant to see if the
Tcl [clock] command works at all, not what its corner-case behaviors are.
Therefore we have no need to test exactly which week a Sunday midnight is
considered to fall into.  Probe the following Tuesday instead.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/797.1487517822@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-02-19 16:14:53 -05:00
Tom Lane
edb02ed145 Back-patch 9.4-era compiler warning fixes into older branches.
Back-patch commit 4e18236180
(another thing that longfin's version of clang doesn't like).
2017-02-17 17:12:14 -05:00
Tom Lane
4dcdc78ffe Back-patch 9.4-era compiler warning fixes into older branches.
This applies portions of commits b64b5ccb6 and b1aebbb6a to the older
branches, in hopes of getting -Werror builds to succeed there.  The
applied changes simply remove useless tests, eg checking an unsigned
variable to see if it is >= 0.  Recent versions of clang warn about
such tests by default.
2017-02-17 16:58:59 -05:00
Tom Lane
52c35254a1 Document usage of COPT environment variable for adjusting configure flags.
Also add to the existing rather half-baked description of PROFILE,
which does exactly the same thing, but I think people use it differently.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16461.1487361849@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-02-17 16:11:03 -05:00
Tom Lane
030705e4fe Make sure that hash join's bulk-tuple-transfer loops are interruptible.
The loops in ExecHashJoinNewBatch(), ExecHashIncreaseNumBatches(), and
ExecHashRemoveNextSkewBucket() are all capable of iterating over many
tuples without ever doing a CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS, so that the backend
might fail to respond to SIGINT or SIGTERM for an unreasonably long time.
Fix that.  In the case of ExecHashJoinNewBatch(), it seems useful to put
the added CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS into ExecHashJoinGetSavedTuple() rather
than directly in the loop, because that will also ensure that both
principal code paths through ExecHashJoinOuterGetTuple() will do a
CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS, which seems like a good idea to avoid surprises.

Back-patch to all supported branches.

Tom Lane and Thomas Munro

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/6044.1487121720@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-02-15 16:40:06 -05:00
Noah Misch
27a8c8033a Ignore tablespace ACLs when ignoring schema ACLs.
The ALTER TABLE ALTER TYPE implementation can issue DROP INDEX and
CREATE INDEX to refit existing indexes for the new column type.  Since
this CREATE INDEX is an implementation detail of an index alteration,
the ensuing DefineIndex() should skip ACL checks specific to index
creation.  It already skips the namespace ACL check.  Make it skip the
tablespace ACL check, too.  Back-patch to 9.2 (all supported versions).

Reviewed by Tom Lane.
2017-02-12 16:05:23 -05:00
Stephen Frost
0021ce2743 Initialize number_of_jobs in NewRestoreOptions
Now that we're checking that the number_of_jobs passed in isn't zero or
negative, we need to actually initialize number_of_jobs to '1' when it
isn't set.

Pointed out by Rushabh Lathia, though not his patch.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAGPqQf2u1T3J=ANhCw1CuvzqjD80oWvMg2-2wmfG08gCm9hhHA@mail.gmail.com
2017-02-07 10:17:02 -05:00
Tom Lane
06a0f6de31 Stamp 9.2.20. 2017-02-06 16:52:27 -05:00
Tom Lane
bcd7b47c28 Avoid returning stale attribute bitmaps in RelationGetIndexAttrBitmap().
The problem with the original coding here is that we might receive (and
clear) a relcache invalidation signal for the target relation down inside
one of the index_open calls we're doing.  Since the target is open, we
would not drop the relcache entry, just reset its rd_indexvalid and
rd_indexlist fields.  But RelationGetIndexAttrBitmap() kept going, and
would eventually cache and return potentially-obsolete attribute bitmaps.

The case where this matters is where the inval signal was from a CREATE
INDEX CONCURRENTLY telling us about a new index on a formerly-unindexed
column.  (In all other cases, the lock we hold on the target rel should
prevent any concurrent change in index state.)  Even just returning the
stale attribute bitmap is not such a problem, because it shouldn't matter
during the transaction in which we receive the signal.  What hurts is
caching the stale data, because it can survive into later transactions,
breaking CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY's expectation that later transactions
will not create new broken HOT chains.  The upshot is that there's a window
for building corrupted indexes during CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY.

This patch fixes the problem by rechecking that the set of index OIDs
is still the same at the end of RelationGetIndexAttrBitmap() as it was
at the start.  If not, we loop back and try again.  That's a little
more than is strictly necessary to fix the bug --- in principle, we
could return the stale data but not cache it --- but it seems like a
bad idea on general principles for relcache to return data it knows
is stale.

There might be more hazards of the same ilk, or there might be a better
way to fix this one, but this patch definitely improves matters and seems
unlikely to make anything worse.  So let's push it into today's releases
even as we continue to study the problem.

Pavan Deolasee and myself

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CABOikdM2MUq9cyZJi1KyLmmkCereyGp5JQ4fuwKoyKEde_mzkQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-02-06 13:20:25 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
e39a63ab02 Translation updates
Source-Git-URL: git://git.postgresql.org/git/pgtranslation/messages.git
Source-Git-Hash: 66e504a4b4750a86d02beb03758a81ef9f96a676
2017-02-06 12:26:42 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
863e70aa7f Add missing newline to error messages
Also improve the message style a bit while we're here.
2017-02-06 09:50:19 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas
2a931efb76 Fix typos in comments.
Backpatch to all supported versions, where applicable, to make backpatching
of future fixes go more smoothly.

Josh Soref

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CACZqfqCf+5qRztLPgmmosr-B0Ye4srWzzw_mo4c_8_B_mtjmJQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-02-06 11:34:32 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas
c5c7558623 Add KOI8-U map files to Makefile.
These were left out by mistake back when support for KOI8-U encoding was
added.

Extracted from Kyotaro Horiguchi's larger patch.
2017-02-02 14:14:15 +02:00
Tom Lane
ef878cc2cd Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2016j.
DST law changes in northern Cyprus (new zone Asia/Famagusta), Russia (new
zone Europe/Saratov), Tonga, Antarctica/Casey.  Historical corrections for
Asia/Aqtau, Asia/Atyrau, Asia/Gaza, Asia/Hebron, Italy, Malta.  Replace
invented zone abbreviation "TOT" for Tonga with numeric UTC offset; but
as in the past, we'll keep accepting "TOT" for input.
2017-01-30 11:41:09 -05:00
Tom Lane
3f6e085fe3 Orthography fixes for new castNode() macro.
Clean up hastily-composed comment.  Normalize whitespace.

Erik Rijkers and myself
2017-01-27 08:33:58 -05:00
Simon Riggs
15c54e8363 Check interrupts during hot standby waits 2017-01-27 12:19:50 +00:00
Andres Freund
14d0e290cb Add castNode(type, ptr) for safe casting between NodeTag based types.
The new function allows to cast from one NodeTag based type to
another, while asserting that the conversion is valid.  This replaces
the common pattern of doing a cast and a Assert(IsA(ptr, type))
close-by.

As this seems likely to be used pervasively, we decided to backpatch
this change the addition of this macro. Otherwise backpatched fixes
are more likely not to work on back-branches.

On branches before 9.6, where we do not yet rely on inline functions
being available, the type assertion is only performed if PG_USE_INLINE
support is detected. The cast obviously is performed regardless.

For the benefit of verifying the macro compiles in the back-branches,
this commit contains a single use of the new macro. On master, a
somewhat larger conversion will be committed separately.

Author: Peter Eisentraut and Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c5d387d9-3440-f5e0-f9d4-71d53b9fbe52@2ndquadrant.com
Backpatch: 9.2-
2017-01-26 16:47:04 -08:00
Tom Lane
fe6120f9b3 Ensure that a tsquery like '!foo' matches empty tsvectors.
!foo means "the tsvector does not contain foo", and therefore it should
match an empty tsvector.  ts_match_vq() overenthusiastically supposed
that an empty tsvector could never match any query, so it forcibly
returned FALSE, the wrong answer.  Remove the premature optimization.

Our behavior on this point was inconsistent, because while seqscans and
GIST index searches both failed to match empty tsvectors, GIN index
searches would find them, since GIN scans don't rely on ts_match_vq().
That makes this certainly a bug, not a debatable definition disagreement,
so back-patch to all supported branches.

Report and diagnosis by Tom Dunstan (bug #14515); added test cases by me.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170126025524.1434.97828@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-01-26 12:17:47 -05:00
Fujii Masao
38bec18056 Fix bug in verifying TLI (timeline ID) in WAL page header during recovery..
Previously ValidXLOGHeader() could not handle properly the case where
we re-read the WAL segment after reading its subsequent segment having
larger TLI. This case can happen, for example, when the WAL record is split
across two segments having different TLI. In this case, since the segment
we're re-reading has the smaller TLI than its subsequent segment we've
already read, ValidXLOGHeader() reported an error "out-of-sequence TLI"
even though TLI sequence was valid (i.e., TLI doesn't go backwards across
successive WAL pages and segments).

This issue was fixed by commit 7fcbf6a405
in 9.3 or later though there is no mention to the bug fix in its commit log.
It changed the WAL check code so that it verifies TLI for pages that are
later than the last remembered LSN. This patch applies the same change to
9.2 where the issue still existed.

Author: Takayuki Tsunakawa and Amit Kapila
Reviewed-By: Robert Haas
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0A3221C70F24FB45833433255569204D1F5E15E5@G01JPEXMBYT05
2017-01-25 07:02:25 +09:00
Tatsuo Ishii
dbaa621cb7 Revert "Fix comments in StrategyNotifyBgWriter()."
This reverts commit 0b7bcf7ad2, which
tried to fix the comments to reflect the change of API of the function
but actually the change had been made only for 9.5 or later.
2017-01-24 10:42:27 +09:00
Tatsuo Ishii
0b7bcf7ad2 Fix comments in StrategyNotifyBgWriter().
The interface for the function was changed in
d72731a704 but the comments of the
function was not updated.

Patch by Yugo Nagata.
2017-01-24 09:51:07 +09:00
Robert Haas
5dff230eb1 Avoid useless respawining the autovacuum launcher at high speed.
When (1) autovacuum = off and (2) there's at least one database with
an XID age greater than autovacuum_freeze_max_age and (3) all tables
in that database that need vacuuming are already being processed by a
worker and (4) the autovacuum launcher is started, a kind of infinite
loop occurs.  The launcher starts a worker and immediately exits.  The
worker, finding no worker to do, immediately starts the launcher,
supposedly so that the next database can be processed.  But because
datfrozenxid for that database hasn't been advanced yet, the new
worker gets put right back into the same database as the old one,
where it once again starts the launcher and exits.  High-speed ping
pong ensues.

There are several possible ways to break the cycle; this seems like
the safest one.

Amit Khandekar (code) and Robert Haas (comments), reviewed by
Álvaro Herrera.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAJ3gD9eWejf72HKquKSzax0r+epS=nAbQKNnykkMA0E8c+rMDg@mail.gmail.com
2017-01-20 16:26:39 -05:00
Tom Lane
154875a77b Reset the proper GUC in create_index test.
Thinko in commit a4523c5aa.  It doesn't really affect anything at
present, but it would be a problem if any tests added later in this
file ought to get index-only-scan plans.  Back-patch, like the previous
commit, just to avoid surprises in case we add such a test and then
back-patch it.

Nikita Glukhov

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8b70135d-ad38-bdd8-ac92-71e2b3c273cf@postgrespro.ru
2017-01-18 16:34:00 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
5462e3486d Change some test macros to return true booleans
These macros work fine when they are used directly in an "if" test or
similar, but as soon as the return values are assigned to boolean
variables (or passed as boolean arguments to some function), they become
bugs, hopefully caught by compiler warnings.  To avoid future problems,
fix the definitions so that they return actual booleans.

To further minimize the risk that somebody uses them in back-patched
fixes that only work correctly in branches starting from the current
master and not in old ones, back-patch the change to supported branches
as appropriate.

See also commit af4472bcb8, and the long
discussion (and larger patch) in the thread mentioned in its commit
message.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18672.1483022414@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-01-18 18:06:13 -03:00
Fujii Masao
c73157ca0e Fix an assertion failure related to an exclusive backup.
Previously multiple sessions could execute pg_start_backup() and
pg_stop_backup() to start and stop an exclusive backup at the same time.
This could trigger the assertion failure of
"FailedAssertion("!(XLogCtl->Insert.exclusiveBackup)".
This happend because, even while pg_start_backup() was starting
an exclusive backup, other session could run pg_stop_backup()
concurrently and mark the backup as not-in-progress unconditionally.

This patch introduces ExclusiveBackupState indicating the state of
an exclusive backup. This state is used to ensure that there is only
one session running pg_start_backup() or pg_stop_backup() at
the same time, to avoid the assertion failure.

Back-patch to all supported versions.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-By: Kyotaro Horiguchi and me
Reported-By: Andreas Seltenreich
Discussion: <87mvktojme.fsf@credativ.de>
2017-01-17 17:32:45 +09:00
Tom Lane
5e1e2e75d2 Throw suitable error for COPY TO STDOUT/FROM STDIN in a SQL function.
A client copy can't work inside a function because the FE/BE wire protocol
doesn't support nesting of a COPY operation within query results.  (Maybe
it could, but the protocol spec doesn't suggest that clients should support
this, and libpq for one certainly doesn't.)

In most PLs, this prohibition is enforced by spi.c, but SQL functions don't
use SPI.  A comparison of _SPI_execute_plan() and init_execution_state()
shows that rejecting client COPY is the only discrepancy in what they
allow, so there's no other similar bugs.

This is an astonishingly ancient oversight, so back-patch to all supported
branches.

Report: https://postgr.es/m/BY2PR05MB2309EABA3DEFA0143F50F0D593780@BY2PR05MB2309.namprd05.prod.outlook.com
2017-01-14 13:27:47 -05:00
Stephen Frost
c59a1a8903 pg_restore: Don't allow non-positive number of jobs
pg_restore will currently accept invalid values for the number of
parallel jobs to run (eg: -1), unlike pg_dump which does check that the
value provided is reasonable.

Worse, '-1' is actually a valid, independent, parameter (as an alias for
--single-transaction), leading to potentially completely unexpected
results from a command line such as:

  -> pg_restore -j -1

Where a user would get neither parallel jobs nor a single-transaction.

Add in validity checking of the parallel jobs option, as we already have
in pg_dump, before we try to open up the archive.  Also move the check
that we haven't been asked to run more parallel jobs than possible on
Windows to the same place, so we do all the option validity checking
before opening the archive.

Back-patch all the way, though for 9.2 we're adding the Windows-specific
check against MAXIMUM_WAIT_OBJECTS as that check wasn't back-patched
originally.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20170110044815.GC18360%40tamriel.snowman.net
2017-01-11 15:46:16 -05:00
Tom Lane
e0d59c6ef5 Fix handling of empty arrays in array_fill().
array_fill(..., array[0]) produced an empty array, which is probably
what users expect, but it was a one-dimensional zero-length array
which is not our standard representation of empty arrays.  Also, for
no very good reason, it rejected empty input arrays; that case should
be allowed and produce an empty output array.

In passing, remove the restriction that the input array(s) have lower
bound 1.  That seems rather pointless, and it would have needed extra
complexity to make the check deal with empty input arrays.

Per bug #14487 from Andrew Gierth.  It's been broken all along, so
back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170105152156.10135.64195@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-01-05 11:33:51 -05:00
Tom Lane
6c4cf2be81 Handle OID column inheritance correctly in ALTER TABLE ... INHERIT.
Inheritance operations must treat the OID column, if any, much like
regular user columns.  But MergeAttributesIntoExisting() neglected to
do that, leading to weird results after a table with OIDs is associated
to a parent with OIDs via ALTER TABLE ... INHERIT.

Report and patch by Amit Langote, reviewed by Ashutosh Bapat, some
adjustments by me.  It's been broken all along, so back-patch to
all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/cb13cfe7-a48c-5720-c383-bb843ab28298@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-01-04 18:00:12 -05:00
Joe Conway
fce04516ec ilence compiler warnings
In GetCachedPlan(), initialize 'plan' to silence a compiler warning, but
also add an Assert() to make sure we don't ever actually fall through
with 'plan' still being set to NULL, since we are about to dereference
it.

Back-patch back to 9.2.

Author: Stephen Frost
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20161129152102.GR13284%40tamriel.snowman.net
2017-01-02 14:12:38 -08:00
Tom Lane
beae7d5f0e Fix interval_transform so it doesn't throw away non-no-op casts.
interval_transform() contained two separate bugs that caused it to
sometimes mistakenly decide that a cast from interval to restricted
interval is a no-op and throw it away.

First, it was wrong to rely on dt.h's field type macros to have an
ordering consistent with the field's significance; in one case they do
not.  This led to mistakenly treating YEAR as less significant than MONTH,
so that a cast from INTERVAL MONTH to INTERVAL YEAR was incorrectly
discarded.

Second, fls(1<<k) produces k+1 not k, so comparing its output directly
to SECOND was wrong.  This led to supposing that a cast to INTERVAL
MINUTE was really a cast to INTERVAL SECOND and so could be discarded.

To fix, get rid of the use of fls(), and make a function based on
intervaltypmodout to produce a field ID code adapted to the need here.

Per bug #14479 from Piotr Stefaniak.  Back-patch to 9.2 where transform
functions were introduced, because this code was born broken.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20161227172307.10135.7747@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2016-12-27 15:43:55 -05:00
Tom Lane
607d0cd148 Remove triggerable Assert in hashname().
hashname() asserted that the key string it is given is shorter than
NAMEDATALEN.  That should surely always be true if the input is in fact a
regular value of type "name".  However, for reasons of coding convenience,
we allow plain old C strings to be treated as "name" values in many places.
Some SQL functions accept arbitrary "text" inputs, convert them to C
strings, and pass them otherwise-untransformed to syscache lookups for name
columns, allowing an overlength input value to trigger hashname's Assert.

This would be a DOS problem, except that it only happens in assert-enabled
builds which aren't recommended for production.  In a production build,
you'll just get a name lookup error, since regardless of the hash value
computed by hashname, the later equality comparison checks can't match.
Likewise, if the catalog lookup is done by seqscan or indexscan searches,
there will just be a lookup error, since the name comparison functions
don't contain any similar length checks, and will see an overlength input
as unequal to any stored entry.

After discussion we concluded that we should simply remove this Assert.
It's inessential to hashname's own functionality, and having such an
assertion in only some paths for name lookup is more of a foot-gun than
a useful check.  There may or may not be a case for the affected callers
to do something other than let the name lookup fail, but we'll consider
that separately; in any case we probably don't want to change such
behavior in the back branches.

Per report from Tushar Ahuja.  Back-patch to all supported branches.

Report: https://postgr.es/m/7d0809ee-6f25-c9d6-8e74-5b2967830d49@enterprisedb.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17691.1482523168@sss.pgh.pa.us
2016-12-26 14:58:33 -05:00
Stephen Frost
071538f349 pg_dumpall: Include --verbose option in --help output
The -v/--verbose option was not included in the output from --help for
pg_dumpall even though it's in the pg_dumpall documentation and has
apparently been around since pg_dumpall was reimplemented in C in 2002.

Fix that by adding it.

Pointed out by Daniel Westermann.

Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/2020970042.4589542.1482482101585.JavaMail.zimbra%40dbi-services.com
2016-12-24 01:42:16 -05:00
Stephen Frost
26b55d6690 Fix tab completion in psql for ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES
When providing tab completion for ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES, we are
including the list of roles as possible options for completion after the
GRANT or REVOKE.  Further, we accept FOR ROLE/IN SCHEMA at the same time
and in either order, but the tab completion was only working for one or
the other.  Lastly, we weren't using the actual list of allowed kinds of
objects for default privileges for completion after the 'GRANT X ON' but
instead were completeing to what 'GRANT X ON' supports, which isn't the
ssame at all.

Address these issues by improving the forward tab-completion for ALTER
DEFAULT PRIVILEGES and then constrain and correct how the tail
completion is done when it is for ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES.

Back-patch the forward/tail tab-completion to 9.6, where we made it easy
to handle such cases.

For 9.5 and earlier, correct the initial tab-completion to at least be
correct as far as it goes and then add a check for GRANT/REVOKE to only
tab-complete when the GRANT/REVOKE is the start of the command, so we
don't try to do tab-completion after we get to the GRANT/REVOKE part of
the ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES command, which is better than providing
incorrect completions.

Initial patch for master and 9.6 by Gilles Darold, though I cleaned it
up and added a few comments.  All bugs in the 9.5 and earlier patch are
mine.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/1614593c-e356-5b27-6dba-66320a9bc68b@dalibo.com
2016-12-23 21:01:51 -05:00
Robert Haas
de651a6e5d Fix broken error check in _hash_doinsert.
You can't just cast a HashMetaPage to a Page, because the meta page
data is stored after the page header, not at offset 0.  Fortunately,
this didn't break anything because it happens to find hashm_bsize
at the offset at which it expects to find pd_pagesize_version, and
the values are close enough to the same that this works out.

Still, it's a bug, so back-patch to all supported versions.

Mithun Cy, revised a bit by me.
2016-12-22 14:15:52 -05:00
Michael Meskes
501c910748 Fix buffer overflow on particularly named files and clarify documentation about
output file naming.

Patch by Tsunakawa, Takayuki <tsunakawa.takay@jp.fujitsu.com>
2016-12-22 08:34:07 +01:00
Tom Lane
6e2c21ec5d Fix detection of unfinished Unicode surrogate pair at end of string.
The U&'...' and U&"..." syntaxes silently discarded a surrogate pair
start (that is, a code between U+D800 and U+DBFF) if it occurred at
the very end of the string.  This seems like an obvious oversight,
since we throw an error for every other invalid combination of surrogate
characters, including the very same situation in E'...' syntax.

This has been wrong since the pair processing was added (in 9.0),
so back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/19113.1482337898@sss.pgh.pa.us
2016-12-21 17:39:33 -05:00
Stephen Frost
da57166b7d Fix dumping of casts and transforms using built-in functions
In pg_dump.c dumpCast() and dumpTransform(), we would happily ignore the
cast or transform if it happened to use a built-in function because we
weren't including the information about built-in functions when querying
pg_proc from getFuncs().

Modify the query in getFuncs() to also gather information about
functions which are used by user-defined casts and transforms (where
"user-defined" means "has an OID >= FirstNormalObjectId").  This also
adds to the TAP regression tests for 9.6 and master to cover these
types of objects.

Back-patch all the way for casts, back to 9.5 for transforms.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/20160504183952.GE10850%40tamriel.snowman.net
2016-12-21 13:47:32 -05:00
Stephen Frost
59a3898914 For 8.0 servers, get last built-in oid from pg_database
We didn't start ensuring that all built-in objects had OIDs less than
16384 until 8.1, so for 8.0 servers we still need to query the value out
of pg_database.  We need this, in particular, to distinguish which casts
were built-in and which were user-defined.

For HEAD, we only worry about going back to 8.0, for the back-branches,
we also ensure that 7.0-7.4 work.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/20160504183952.GE10850%40tamriel.snowman.net
2016-12-21 13:47:32 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas
c8f8ed5c2d Fix off-by-one in memory allocation for quote_literal_cstr().
The calculation didn't take into account the NULL terminator. That lead
to overwriting the palloc'd buffer by one byte, if the input consists
entirely of backslashes. For example "format('%L', E'\\')".

Fixes bug #14468. Backpatch to all supported versions.

Report: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20161216105001.13334.42819%40wrigleys.postgresql.org
2016-12-16 12:53:27 +02:00
Tom Lane
2b7d715c0d Sync our copy of the timezone library with IANA release tzcode2016j.
This is a trivial update (consisting in fact only in the addition of
a comment).  The point is just to get back to being synced with an
official release of tzcode, rather than some ad-hoc point in their
commit history, which is where commit 1f87181e1 left it.
2016-12-15 14:33:19 -05:00
Kevin Grittner
60314e28eb Back-patch fcff8a5751 as a bug fix.
When there is both a serialization failure and a unique violation,
throw the former rather than the latter.  When initially pushed,
this was viewed as a feature to assist application framework
developers, so that they could more accurately determine when to
retry a failed transaction, but a test case presented by Ian
Jackson has shown that this patch can prevent serialization
anomalies in some cases where a unique violation is caught within a
subtransaction, the work of that subtransaction is discarded, and
no error is thrown.  That makes this a bug fix, so it is being
back-patched to all supported branches where it is not already
present (i.e., 9.2 to 9.5).

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1481307991-16971-1-git-send-email-ian.jackson@eu.citrix.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/22607.56276.807567.924144@mariner.uk.xensource.com
2016-12-13 19:08:09 -06:00
Tom Lane
2d48131ed1 Use "%option prefix" to set API names in ecpg's lexer.
Back-patch commit 92fb64983 into the pre-9.6 branches.

Without this, ecpg fails to build with the latest version of flex.
It's not unreasonable that people would want to compile our old branches
with recent tools.  Per report from Дилян Палаузов.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/d845c1af-e18d-6651-178f-9f08cdf37e10@aegee.org
2016-12-11 18:04:28 -05:00
Tom Lane
329361cfa3 Build backend/parser/scan.l and interfaces/ecpg/preproc/pgc.l standalone.
Back-patch commit 72b1e3a21 into the pre-9.6 branches.

As noted in the original commit, this has some extra benefits: we can
narrow the scope of the -Wno-error flag that's forced on scan.c.  Also,
since these grammar and lexer files are so large, splitting them into
separate build targets should have some advantages in build speed,
particularly in parallel or ccache'd builds.

However, the real reason for doing this now is that it avoids symbol-
redefinition warnings (or worse) with the latest version of flex.
It's not unreasonable that people would want to compile our old branches
with recent tools.  Per report from Дилян Палаузов.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/d845c1af-e18d-6651-178f-9f08cdf37e10@aegee.org
2016-12-11 17:44:17 -05:00
Tom Lane
f4ccee408d Prevent crash when ts_rewrite() replaces a non-top-level subtree with null.
When ts_rewrite()'s replacement argument is an empty tsquery, it's supposed
to simplify any operator nodes whose operand(s) become NULL; but it failed
to do that reliably, because dropvoidsubtree() only examined the top level
of the result tree.  Rather than make a second recursive pass, let's just
give the responsibility to dofindsubquery() to simplify while it's doing
the main replacement pass.  Per report from Andreas Seltenreich.

Artur Zakirov, with some cosmetic changes by me.  Back-patch to all
supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8737i01dew.fsf@credativ.de
2016-12-11 13:09:57 -05:00
Tom Lane
981885d177 Be more careful about Python refcounts while creating exception objects.
PLy_generate_spi_exceptions neglected to do Py_INCREF on the new exception
objects, evidently supposing that PyModule_AddObject would do that --- but
it doesn't.  This left us in a situation where a Python garbage collection
cycle could result in deletion of exception object(s), causing server
crashes or wrong answers if the exception objects are used later in the
session.

In addition, PLy_generate_spi_exceptions didn't bother to test for
a null result from PyErr_NewException, which at best is inconsistent
with the code in PLy_add_exceptions.  And PLy_add_exceptions, while it
did do Py_INCREF on the exceptions it makes, waited to do that till
after some PyModule_AddObject calls, creating a similar risk for
failure if garbage collection happened within those calls.

To fix, refactor to have just one piece of code that creates an
exception object and adds it to the spiexceptions module, bumping the
refcount first.

Also, let's add an additional refcount to represent the pointer we're
going to store in a C global variable or hash table.  This should only
matter if the user does something weird like delete the spiexceptions
Python module, but lack of paranoia has caused us enough problems in
PL/Python already.

The fact that PyModule_AddObject doesn't do a Py_INCREF of its own
explains the need for the Py_INCREF added in commit 4c966d920, so we
can improve the comment about that; also, this means we really want
to do that before not after the PyModule_AddObject call.

The missing Py_INCREF in PLy_generate_spi_exceptions was reported and
diagnosed by Rafa de la Torre; the other fixes by me.  Back-patch
to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+Fz15kR1OXZv43mDrJb3XY+1MuQYWhx5kx3ea6BRKQp6ezGkg@mail.gmail.com
2016-12-09 15:27:23 -05:00
Tom Lane
082d1fb9e4 Fix reporting of column typmods for multi-row VALUES constructs.
expandRTE() and get_rte_attribute_type() reported the exprType() and
exprTypmod() values of the expressions in the first row of the VALUES as
being the column type/typmod returned by the VALUES RTE.  That's fine for
the data type, since we coerce all expressions in a column to have the same
common type.  But we don't coerce them to have a common typmod, so it was
possible for rows after the first one to return values that violate the
claimed column typmod.  This leads to the incorrect result seen in bug
#14448 from Hassan Mahmood, as well as some other corner-case misbehaviors.

The desired behavior is the same as we use in other type-unification
cases: report the common typmod if there is one, but otherwise return -1
indicating no particular constraint.

We fixed this in HEAD by deriving the typmods during transformValuesClause
and storing them in the RTE, but that's not a feasible solution in the back
branches.  Instead, just use a brute-force approach of determining the
correct common typmod during expandRTE() and get_rte_attribute_type().
Simple testing says that that doesn't really cost much, at least not in
common cases where expandRTE() is only used once per query.  It turns out
that get_rte_attribute_type() is typically never used at all on VALUES
RTEs, so the inefficiency there is of no great concern.

Report: https://postgr.es/m/20161205143037.4377.60754@wrigleys.postgresql.org
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/27429.1480968538@sss.pgh.pa.us
2016-12-09 12:01:14 -05:00
Robert Haas
a00ac62991 Log the creation of an init fork unconditionally.
Previously, it was thought that this only needed to be done for the
benefit of possible standbys, so wal_level = minimal skipped it.
But that's not safe, because during crash recovery we might replay
XLOG_DBASE_CREATE or XLOG_TBLSPC_CREATE record which recursively
removes the directory that contains the new init fork.  So log it
always.

The user-visible effect of this bug is that if you create a database
or tablespace, then create an unlogged table, then crash without
checkpointing, then restart, accessing the table will fail, because
the it won't have been properly reset.  This commit fixes that.

Michael Paquier, per a report from Konstantin Knizhnik.  Wording of
the comments per a suggestion from me.
2016-12-08 14:19:25 -05:00
Tom Lane
311bc147ff Restore psql's SIGPIPE setting if popen() fails.
Ancient oversight in PageOutput(): if popen() fails, we'd better reset
the SIGPIPE handler before returning stdout, because ClosePager() won't.
Noticed while fixing the empty-PAGER issue.
2016-12-07 12:39:24 -05:00
Tom Lane
1ec5cc025b Handle empty or all-blank PAGER setting more sanely in psql.
If the PAGER environment variable is set but contains an empty string,
psql would pass it to "sh" which would silently exit, causing whatever
query output we were printing to vanish entirely.  This is quite
mystifying; it took a long time for us to figure out that this was the
cause of Joseph Brenner's trouble report.  Rather than allowing that
to happen, we should treat this as another way to specify "no pager".
(We could alternatively treat it as selecting the default pager, but
it seems more likely that the former is what the user meant to achieve
by setting PAGER this way.)

Nonempty, but all-white-space, PAGER values have the same behavior, and
it's pretty easy to test for that, so let's handle that case the same way.

Most other cases of faulty PAGER values will result in the shell printing
some kind of complaint to stderr, which should be enough to diagnose the
problem, so we don't need to work harder than this.  (Note that there's
been an intentional decision not to be very chatty about apparent failure
returns from the pager process, since that may happen if, eg, the user
quits the pager with control-C or some such.  I'd just as soon not start
splitting hairs about which exit codes might merit making our own report.)

libpq's old PQprint() function was already on board with ignoring empty
PAGER values, but for consistency, make it ignore all-white-space values
as well.

It's been like this a long time, so back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFfgvXWLOE2novHzYjmQK8-J6TmHz42G8f3X0SORM44+stUGmw@mail.gmail.com
2016-12-07 12:19:57 -05:00
Noah Misch
d83c942920 Make pgwin32_putenv() visit debug CRTs.
This has no effect in the most conventional case, where no relevant DLL
uses a debug build.  For an example where it does matter, given a debug
build of MIT Kerberos, the krb_server_keyfile parameter usually had no
effect.  Since nobody wants a Heisenbug, back-patch to 9.2 (all
supported versions).

Christian Ullrich, reviewed by Michael Paquier.
2016-12-03 15:47:52 -05:00
Noah Misch
a9265258af Remove wrong CloseHandle() call.
In accordance with its own documentation, invoke CloseHandle() only when
directed in the documentation for the function that furnished the
handle.  GetModuleHandle() does not so direct.  We have been issuing
this call only in the rare event that a CRT DLL contains no "_putenv"
symbol, so lack of bug reports is uninformative.  Back-patch to 9.2 (all
supported versions).

Christian Ullrich, reviewed by Michael Paquier.
2016-12-03 15:47:49 -05:00
Noah Misch
117818252d Refine win32env.c cosmetics.
Replace use of plain 0 as a null pointer constant.  In comments, update
terminology and lessen redundancy.  Back-patch to 9.2 (all supported
versions) for the convenience of back-patching the next two commits.

Christian Ullrich and Noah Misch, reviewed (in earlier versions) by
Michael Paquier.
2016-12-03 15:47:44 -05:00
Tom Lane
a982b02a49 Fix test about ignoring extension dependencies during extension scripts.
Commit 08dd23cec introduced an exception to the rule that extension member
objects can only be dropped as part of dropping the whole extension,
intending to allow such drops while running the extension's own creation or
update scripts.  However, the exception was only applied at the outermost
recursion level, because it was modeled on a pre-existing check to ignore
dependencies on objects listed in pendingObjects.  Bug #14434 from Philippe
Beaudoin shows that this is inadequate: in some cases we can reach an
extension member object by recursion from another one.  (The bug concerns
the serial-sequence case; I'm not sure if there are other cases, but there
might well be.)

To fix, revert 08dd23cec's changes to findDependentObjects() and instead
apply the creating_extension exception regardless of stack level.

Having seen this example, I'm a bit suspicious that the pendingObjects
logic is also wrong and such cases should likewise be allowed at any
recursion level.  However, changing that would interact in subtle ways
with the recursion logic (at least it would need to be moved to after the
recursing-from check).  Given that the code's been like that a long time,
I'll refrain from touching it without a clear example showing it's wrong.

Back-patch to all active branches.  In HEAD and 9.6, where suitable
test infrastructure exists, add a regression test case based on the
bug report.

Report: <20161125151448.6529.33039@wrigleys.postgresql.org>
Discussion: <13224.1480177514@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-11-26 13:31:35 -05:00
Tom Lane
6a363a4c25 Check for pending trigger events on far end when dropping an FK constraint.
When dropping a foreign key constraint with ALTER TABLE DROP CONSTRAINT,
we refuse the drop if there are any pending trigger events on the named
table; this ensures that we won't remove the pg_trigger row that will be
consulted by those events.  But we should make the same check for the
referenced relation, else we might remove a due-to-be-referenced pg_trigger
row for that relation too, resulting in "could not find trigger NNN" or
"relation NNN has no triggers" errors at commit.  Per bug #14431 from
Benjie Gillam.  Back-patch to all supported branches.

Report: <20161124114911.6530.31200@wrigleys.postgresql.org>
2016-11-25 13:44:48 -05:00
Tom Lane
05975ab0a6 Make sure ALTER TABLE preserves index tablespaces.
When rebuilding an existing index, ALTER TABLE correctly kept the
physical file in the same tablespace, but it messed up the pg_class
entry if the index had been in the database's default tablespace
and "default_tablespace" was set to some non-default tablespace.
This led to an inaccessible index.

Fix by fixing pg_get_indexdef_string() to always include a tablespace
clause, whether or not the index is in the default tablespace.  The
previous behavior was installed in commit 537e92e41, and I think it just
wasn't thought through very clearly; certainly the possible effect of
default_tablespace wasn't considered.  There's some risk in changing the
behavior of this function, but there are no other call sites in the core
code.  Even if it's being used by some third party extension, it's fairly
hard to envision a usage that is okay with a tablespace clause being
appended some of the time but can't handle it being appended all the time.

Back-patch to all supported versions.

Code fix by me, investigation and test cases by Michael Paquier.

Discussion: <1479294998857-5930602.post@n3.nabble.com>
2016-11-23 13:45:56 -05:00
Tom Lane
7e8cc250ac Fix PGLC_localeconv() to handle errors better.
The code was intentionally not very careful about leaking strdup'd
strings in case of an error.  That was forgivable probably, but it
also failed to notice strdup() failures, which could lead to subsequent
null-pointer-dereference crashes, since many callers unsurprisingly
didn't check for null pointers in the struct lconv fields.  An even
worse problem is that it could throw error while we were setlocale'd
to a non-C locale, causing unwanted behavior in subsequent libc calls.

Rewrite to ensure that we cannot throw elog(ERROR) until after we've
restored the previous locale settings, or at least attempted to.
(I'm sorely tempted to make restore failure be a FATAL error, but
will refrain for the moment.)  Having done that, it's not much more
work to ensure that we clean up strdup'd storage on the way out, too.

This code is substantially the same in all supported branches, so
back-patch all the way.

Michael Paquier and Tom Lane

Discussion: <CAB7nPqRMbGqa_mesopcn4MPyTs34eqtVEK7ELYxvvV=oqS00YA@mail.gmail.com>
2016-11-21 18:21:56 -05:00
Tom Lane
13aa9af378 Allow DOS-style line endings in ~/.pgpass files.
On Windows, libc will mask \r\n line endings for us, since we read the
password file in text mode.  But that doesn't happen on Unix.  People
who share password files across both systems might have \r\n line endings
in a file they use on Unix, so as a convenience, ignore trailing \r.
Per gripe from Josh Berkus.

In passing, put the existing check for empty line somewhere where it's
actually useful, ie after stripping the newline not before.

Vik Fearing, adjusted a bit by me

Discussion: <0de37763-5843-b2cc-855e-5d0e5df25807@agliodbs.com>
2016-11-15 16:17:19 -05:00
Tom Lane
92b7b1058c Rationalize and document pltcl's handling of magic ".tupno" array element.
For a very long time, pltcl's spi_exec and spi_execp commands have had
a behavior of storing the current row number as an element of output
arrays, but this was never documented.  Fix that.

For an equally long time, pltcl_trigger_handler had a behavior of silently
ignoring ".tupno" as an output column name, evidently so that the result
of spi_exec could be used directly as a trigger result tuple.  Not sure
how useful that really is, but in any case it's bad that it would break
attempts to use ".tupno" as an actual column name.  We can fix it by not
checking for ".tupno" until after we check for a column name match.  This
comports with the effective behavior of spi_exec[p] that ".tupno" is only
magic when you don't have an actual column named that.

In passing, wordsmith the description of returning modified tuples from
a pltcl trigger.

Noted while working on Jim Nasby's patch to support composite results
from pltcl.  The inability to return trigger tuples using ".tupno" as
a column name is a bug, so back-patch to all supported branches.
2016-11-06 14:43:14 -05:00
Tom Lane
6653dbafd8 More zic cleanup.
The workaround the IANA guys chose to get rid of the clang warning
we'd silenced in commit 23ed2ba81 turns out not to satisfy Coverity.
Go back to the previous solution, ie, remove the useless comparison
to SIZE_MAX.  (In principle, there could be machines out there where
it's not useless because ptrdiff_t is wider than size_t.  But the whole
thing is pretty academic anyway, as we could never approach this limit
for any sane estimate of the amount of data that zic will ever be asked
to work with.)

Also, s/lineno/lineno_t/g, because if we accept their decision to start
using "lineno" as a typedef, it is going to have very unpleasant
consequences in our next pgindent run.  Noted that while fooling with
pltcl yesterday.
2016-11-06 10:46:34 -05:00
Tom Lane
07bc2fc457 Sync our copy of the timezone library with IANA tzcode master.
This patch absorbs some unreleased fixes for symlink manipulation bugs
introduced in tzcode 2016g.  Ordinarily I'd wait around for a released
version, but in this case it seems like we could do with extra testing,
in particular checking whether it works in EDB's VMware build environment.
This corresponds to commit aec59156abbf8472ba201b6c7ca2592f9c10e077 in
https://github.com/eggert/tz.

Per a report from Sandeep Thakkar, building in an environment where hard
links are not supported in the timezone data installation directory failed,
because upstream code refactoring had broken the case of symlinking from an
existing symlink.  Further experimentation also showed that the symlinks
were sometimes made incorrectly, with too many or too few "../"'s in the
symlink contents.

Back-patch of commit 1f87181e12.

Report: <CANFyU94_p6mqRQc2i26PFp5QAOQGB++AjGX=FO8LDpXw0GSTjw@mail.gmail.com>
Discussion: http://mm.icann.org/pipermail/tz/2016-November/024431.html
2016-11-04 10:44:16 -04:00
Tom Lane
606e16a7f9 Fix nasty performance problem in tsquery_rewrite().
tsquery_rewrite() tries to find matches to subsets of AND/OR conditions;
for example, in the query 'a | b | c' the substitution subquery 'a | c'
should match and lead to replacement of the first and third items.
That's fine, but the matching algorithm apparently takes about O(2^N)
for an N-clause query (I say "apparently" because the code is also both
unintelligible and uncommented).  We could probably do better than that
even without any extra assumptions --- but actually, we know that the
subclauses are sorted, indeed are depending on that elsewhere in this very
same function.  So we can just scan the two lists a single time to detect
matches, as though we were doing a merge join.

Also do a re-flattening call (QTNTernary()) in tsquery_rewrite_query, just
to make sure that the tree fits the expectations of the next search cycle.
I didn't try to devise a test case for this, but I'm pretty sure that the
oversight could have led to failure to match in some cases where a match
would be expected.

Improve comments, and also stick a CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS into
dofindsubquery, just in case it's still too slow for somebody.

Per report from Andreas Seltenreich.  Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: <8760oasf2y.fsf@credativ.de>
2016-10-30 17:35:43 -04:00
Tom Lane
b0f8a273e6 Fix bogus tree-flattening logic in QTNTernary().
QTNTernary() contains logic to flatten, eg, '(a & b) & c' into 'a & b & c',
which is all well and good, but it tries to do that to NOT nodes as well,
so that '!!a' gets changed to '!a'.  Explicitly restrict the conversion to
be done only on AND and OR nodes, and add a test case illustrating the bug.

In passing, provide some comments for the sadly naked functions in
tsquery_util.c, and simplify some baroque logic in QTNFree(), which
I think may have been leaking some items it intended to free.

Noted while investigating a complaint from Andreas Seltenreich.
Back-patch to all supported versions.
2016-10-30 15:24:40 -04:00
Robert Haas
2be2838a71 If the stats collector dies during Hot Standby, restart it.
This bug exists as far back as 9.0, when Hot Standby was introduced,
so back-patch to all supported branches.

Report and patch by Takayuki Tsunakawa, reviewed by Michael Paquier
and Kuntal Ghosh.
2016-10-27 14:56:53 -04:00
Robert Haas
629575fa2d Fix possible pg_basebackup failure on standby with "include WAL".
If a restartpoint flushed no dirty buffers, it could fail to update
the minimum recovery point, leading to a minimum recovery point prior
to the starting REDO location.  perform_base_backup() would interpret
that as meaning that no WAL files at all needed to be included in the
backup, failing an internal sanity check.  To fix, have restartpoints
always update the minimum recovery point to just after the checkpoint
record itself, so that the file (or files) containing the checkpoint
record will always be included in the backup.

Code by Amit Kapila, per a design suggestion by me, with some
additional work on the code comment by me.  Test case by Michael
Paquier.  Report by Kyotaro Horiguchi.
2016-10-27 12:14:07 -04:00
Tom Lane
1c8364f3ae Fix not-HAVE_SYMLINK code in zic.c.
I broke this in commit f3094920a.  Apparently it's dead code anyway,
at least as far as our buildfarm is concerned (and the upstream IANA
code doesn't worry at all about symlink() not being present).
But as long as the rest of our code is willing to guard against not
having symlink(), this should too.  Noted while investigating a
tangentially-related complaint from Sandeep Thakkar.

Back-patch to keep branches in sync.
2016-10-26 13:41:16 -04:00
Tom Lane
b3453562b3 Stamp 9.2.19. 2016-10-24 16:17:41 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
89dabaf4a2 Translation updates
Source-Git-URL: git://git.postgresql.org/git/pgtranslation/messages.git
Source-Git-Hash: 4536e21f450b2265a262f9f9acf912ae5416a1ee
2016-10-24 10:52:41 -04:00
Tom Lane
9bc01e7a4c Avoid testing tuple visibility without buffer lock in RI_FKey_check().
Despite the argumentation I wrote in commit 7a2fe85b0, it's unsafe to do
this, because in corner cases it's possible for HeapTupleSatisfiesSelf
to try to set hint bits on the target tuple; and at least since 8.2 we
have required the buffer content lock to be held while setting hint bits.

The added regression test exercises one such corner case.  Unpatched, it
causes an assertion failure in assert-enabled builds, or otherwise would
cause a hint bit change in a buffer we don't hold lock on, which given
the right race condition could result in checksum failures or other data
consistency problems.  The odds of a problem in the field are probably
pretty small, but nonetheless back-patch to all supported branches.

Report: <19391.1477244876@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-10-23 15:01:24 -04:00
Tom Lane
f17c26dbd6 Fix EXPLAIN so that it doesn't emit invalid XML in corner cases.
With track_io_timing = on, EXPLAIN (ANALYZE, BUFFERS) will emit fields
named like "I/O Read Time".  The slash makes that invalid as an XML
element name, so that adding FORMAT XML would produce invalid XML.

We already have code in there to translate spaces to dashes, so let's
generalize that to convert anything that isn't a valid XML name character,
viz letters, digits, hyphens, underscores, and periods.  We could just
reject slashes, which would run a bit faster.  But the fact that this went
unnoticed for so long doesn't give me a warm feeling that we'd notice the
next creative violation, so let's make it a permanent fix.

Reported by Markus Winand, though this isn't his initial patch proposal.

Back-patch to 9.2 where track_io_timing was added.  The problem is only
latent in 9.1, so I don't feel a need to fix it there.

Discussion: <E0BF6A45-68E8-45E6-918F-741FB332C6BB@winand.at>
2016-10-20 17:18:14 -04:00
Tom Lane
b2aee4cb68 Sync our copy of the timezone library with IANA release tzcode2016h.
This absorbs a fix for a symlink-manipulation bug in zic that was
introduced in 2016g.  It probably isn't interesting for our use-case,
but I'm not quite sure, so let's update while we're at it.
2016-10-20 15:40:30 -04:00
Tom Lane
3c5fae786d Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2016h.
(Didn't I just do this?  Oh well.)

DST law changes in Palestine.  Historical corrections for Turkey.
Switch to numeric abbreviations for Asia/Colombo.
2016-10-20 15:20:35 -04:00
Tom Lane
0d386bdb6c Another portability fix for tzcode2016g update.
clang points out that SIZE_MAX wouldn't fit into an int, which means
this comparison is pretty useless.  Per report from Thomas Munro.
2016-10-19 23:33:11 -04:00
Tom Lane
d5911df8a7 Windows portability fix.
Per buildfarm.
2016-10-19 19:28:34 -04:00
Tom Lane
66adeefdad Sync our copy of the timezone library with IANA release tzcode2016g.
This is mostly to absorb some corner-case fixes in zic for year-2037
timestamps.  The other changes that have been made are unlikely to affect
our usage, but nonetheless we may as well take 'em.
2016-10-19 18:56:14 -04:00
Tom Lane
579beef2e5 Suppress "Factory" zone in pg_timezone_names view for tzdata >= 2016g.
IANA got rid of the really silly "abbreviation" and replaced it with one
that's only moderately silly.  But it's still pointless, so keep on not
showing it.
2016-10-19 18:12:13 -04:00
Tom Lane
a03339aef2 Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2016g.
DST law changes in Turkey.  Historical corrections for America/Los_Angeles,
Europe/Kirov, Europe/Moscow, Europe/Samara, and Europe/Ulyanovsk.
Rename Asia/Rangoon to Asia/Yangon, with a backward compatibility link.

The IANA crew continue their campaign to replace invented time zone
abbrevations with numeric GMT offsets.  This update changes numerous zones
in Antarctica and the former Soviet Union, for instance Antarctica/Casey
now reports "+08" not "AWST" in the pg_timezone_names view.  I kept these
abbreviations in the tznames/ data files, however, so that we will still
accept them for input.  (We may want to start trimming those files someday,
but today is not that day.)

An exception is that since IANA no longer claims that "AMT" is in use
in Armenia for GMT+4, I replaced it in the Default file with GMT-4,
corresponding to Amazon Time which is in use in South America.  It may be
that that meaning is also invented and IANA will drop it in a future
update; but for now, it seems silly to give pride of place to a meaning
not traceable to IANA over one that is.
2016-10-19 17:57:01 -04:00
Tom Lane
eb338c1cd5 Fix cidin() to handle values above 2^31 platform-independently.
CommandId is declared as uint32, and values up to 4G are indeed legal.
cidout() handles them properly by treating the value as unsigned int.
But cidin() was just using atoi(), which has platform-dependent behavior
for values outside the range of signed int, as reported by Bart Lengkeek
in bug #14379.  Use strtoul() instead, as xidin() does.

In passing, make some purely cosmetic changes to make xidin/xidout
look more like cidin/cidout; the former didn't have a monopoly on
best practice IMO.

Neither xidin nor cidin make any attempt to throw error for invalid input.
I didn't change that here, and am not sure it's worth worrying about
since neither is really a user-facing type.  The point is just to ensure
that indubitably-valid inputs work as expected.

It's been like this for a long time, so back-patch to all supported
branches.

Report: <20161018152550.1413.6439@wrigleys.postgresql.org>
2016-10-18 12:25:14 -04:00
Tom Lane
a567b7c11b Fix assorted integer-overflow hazards in varbit.c.
bitshiftright() and bitshiftleft() would recursively call each other
infinitely if the user passed INT_MIN for the shift amount, due to integer
overflow in negating the shift amount.  To fix, clamp to -VARBITMAXLEN.
That doesn't change the results since any shift distance larger than the
input bit string's length produces an all-zeroes result.

Also fix some places that seemed inadequately paranoid about input typmods
exceeding VARBITMAXLEN.  While a typmod accepted by anybit_typmodin() will
certainly be much less than that, at least some of these spots are
reachable with user-chosen integer values.

Andreas Seltenreich and Tom Lane

Discussion: <87d1j2zqtz.fsf@credativ.de>
2016-10-14 16:28:34 -04:00
Tom Lane
6f2db29ecb Fix another bug in merging of inherited CHECK constraints.
It's not good for an inherited child constraint to be marked connoinherit;
that would result in the constraint not propagating to grandchild tables,
if any are created later.  The code mostly prevented this from happening
but there was one case that was missed.

This is somewhat related to commit e55a946a8, which also tightened checks
on constraint merging.  Hence, back-patch to 9.2 like that one.  This isn't
so much because there's a concrete feature-related reason to stop there,
as to avoid having more distinct behaviors than we have to in this area.

Amit Langote

Discussion: <b28ee774-7009-313d-dd55-5bdd81242c41@lab.ntt.co.jp>
2016-10-13 17:05:15 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
6f02092522 Fix copy-pasto in comment.
Amit Langote
2016-10-12 12:09:12 +03:00
Tom Lane
7397f62e7f In PQsendQueryStart(), avoid leaking any left-over async result.
Ordinarily there would not be an async result sitting around at this
point, but it appears that in corner cases there can be.  Considering
all the work we're about to launch, it's hardly going to cost anything
noticeable to check.

It's been like this forever, so back-patch to all supported branches.

Report: <CAD-Qf1eLUtBOTPXyFQGW-4eEsop31tVVdZPu4kL9pbQ6tJPO8g@mail.gmail.com>
2016-10-10 10:35:58 -04:00
Tom Lane
a54faa6591 Fix two bugs in merging of inherited CHECK constraints.
Historically, we've allowed users to add a CHECK constraint to a child
table and then add an identical CHECK constraint to the parent.  This
results in "merging" the two constraints so that the pre-existing
child constraint ends up with both conislocal = true and coninhcount > 0.
However, if you tried to do it in the other order, you got a duplicate
constraint error.  This is problematic for pg_dump, which needs to issue
separated ADD CONSTRAINT commands in some cases, but has no good way to
ensure that the constraints will be added in the required order.
And it's more than a bit arbitrary, too.  The goal of complaining about
duplicated ADD CONSTRAINT commands can be served if we reject the case of
adding a constraint when the existing one already has conislocal = true;
but if it has conislocal = false, let's just make the ADD CONSTRAINT set
conislocal = true.  In this way, either order of adding the constraints
has the same end result.

Another problem was that the code allowed creation of a parent constraint
marked convalidated that is merged with a child constraint that is
!convalidated.  In this case, an inheritance scan of the parent table could
emit some rows violating the constraint condition, which would be an
unexpected result given the marking of the parent constraint as validated.
Hence, forbid merging of constraints in this case.  (Note: valid child and
not-valid parent seems fine, so continue to allow that.)

Per report from Benedikt Grundmann.  Back-patch to 9.2 where we introduced
possibly-not-valid check constraints.  The second bug obviously doesn't
apply before that, and I think the first doesn't either, because pg_dump
only gets into this situation when dealing with not-valid constraints.

Report: <CADbMkNPT-Jz5PRSQ4RbUASYAjocV_KHUWapR%2Bg8fNvhUAyRpxA%40mail.gmail.com>
Discussion: <22108.1475874586@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-10-08 19:29:28 -04:00
Tom Lane
7ca8895e48 Remove user_relns() SRF from regression tests.
Back-patch commit 0dba54f166 into the older
branches.  This test is almost as much of a patching hazard there as it is
in HEAD, and it has no more reason to be needed than it does in HEAD.

I went back as far as 9.2; I judged 9.1 not worth the trouble since
it's on the verge of being EOL'd.
2016-10-08 18:43:01 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
5d5dc6f68a Clear OpenSSL error queue after failed X509_STORE_load_locations() call.
Leaving the error in the error queue used to be harmless, because the
X509_STORE_load_locations() call used to be the last step in
initialize_SSL(), and we would clear the queue before the next
SSL_connect() call. But previous commit moved things around. The symptom
was that if a CRL file was not found, and one of the subsequent
initialization steps, like loading the client certificate or private key,
failed, we would incorrectly print the "no such file" error message from
the earlier X509_STORE_load_locations() call as the reason.

Backpatch to all supported versions, like the previous patch.
2016-10-07 12:53:49 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas
e7bb327e34 Don't share SSL_CTX between libpq connections.
There were several issues with the old coding:

1. There was a race condition, if two threads opened a connection at the
   same time. We used a mutex around SSL_CTX_* calls, but that was not
   enough, e.g. if one thread SSL_CTX_load_verify_locations() with one
   path, and another thread set it with a different path, before the first
   thread got to establish the connection.

2. Opening two different connections, with different sslrootcert settings,
   seemed to fail outright with "SSL error: block type is not 01". Not sure
   why.

3. We created the SSL object, before calling SSL_CTX_load_verify_locations
   and SSL_CTX_use_certificate_chain_file on the SSL context. That was
   wrong, because the options set on the SSL context are propagated to the
   SSL object, when the SSL object is created. If they are set after the
   SSL object has already been created, they won't take effect until the
   next connection. (This is bug #14329)

At least some of these could've been fixed while still using a shared
context, but it would've been more complicated and error-prone. To keep
things simple, let's just use a separate SSL context for each connection,
and accept the overhead.

Backpatch to all supported versions.

Report, analysis and test case by Kacper Zuk.

Discussion: <20160920101051.1355.79453@wrigleys.postgresql.org>
2016-10-07 12:23:58 +03:00
Alvaro Herrera
e0da2c6419 Include <sys/select.h> where needed
<sys/select.h> is required by POSIX.1-2001 to get the prototype of
select(2), but nearly no systems enforce that because older standards
let you get away with including some other headers.  Recent OpenBSD
hacking has removed that frail touch of friendliness, however, which
broke some compiles; fix all the way back to 9.1 by adding the required
standard.  Only vacuumdb.c was reported to fail, but it seems easier to
fix the whole lot in a fell swoop.

Per bug #14334 by Sean Farrell.
2016-09-27 01:05:21 -03:00
Tom Lane
53b29d9864 Fix incorrect logic for excluding range constructor functions in pg_dump.
Faulty AND/OR nesting in the WHERE clause of getFuncs' SQL query led to
dumping range constructor functions if they are part of an extension
and we're in binary-upgrade mode.  Actually, we don't want to dump them
separately even then, since CREATE TYPE AS RANGE will create the range's
constructor functions regardless.  Per report from Andrew Dunstan.

It looks like this mistake was introduced by me, in commit b985d4877, in
perhaps-overzealous refactoring to reduce code duplication.  I'm suitably
embarrassed.

Report: <34854939-02d7-f591-5677-ce2994104599@dunslane.net>
2016-09-23 13:49:27 -04:00
Tom Lane
8552f9b903 Be sure to rewind the tuplestore read pointer in non-leader CTEScan nodes.
ExecInitCteScan supposed that it didn't have to do anything to the extra
tuplestore read pointer it gets from tuplestore_alloc_read_pointer.
However, it needs this read pointer to be positioned at the start of the
tuplestore, while tuplestore_alloc_read_pointer is actually defined as
cloning the current position of read pointer 0.  In normal situations
that accidentally works because we initialize the whole plan tree at once,
before anything gets read.  But it fails in an EvalPlanQual recheck, as
illustrated in bug #14328 from Dima Pavlov.  To fix, just forcibly rewind
the pointer after tuplestore_alloc_read_pointer.  The cost of doing so is
negligible unless the tuplestore is already in TSS_READFILE state, which
wouldn't happen in normal cases.  We could consider altering tuplestore's
API to make that case cheaper, but that would make for a more invasive
back-patch and it doesn't seem worth it.

This has been broken probably for as long as we've had CTEs, so back-patch
to all supported branches.

Discussion: <32468.1474548308@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-09-22 11:34:44 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
a4a3fac169 Fix ecpg -? option on Windows, add -V alias for --version.
This makes the -? and -V options work consistently with other binaries.
--help and --version are now only recognized as the first option, i.e.
"ecpg --foobar --help" no longer prints the help, but that's consistent
with most of our other binaries, too.

Backpatch to all supported versions.

Haribabu Kommi

Discussion: <CAJrrPGfnRXvmCzxq6Dy=stAWebfNHxiL+Y_z7uqksZUCkW_waQ@mail.gmail.com>
2016-09-18 14:00:13 +03:00
Simon Riggs
eaf6fe7fae Fix VACUUM_TRUNCATE_LOCK_WAIT_INTERVAL
lazy_truncate_heap() was waiting for
VACUUM_TRUNCATE_LOCK_WAIT_INTERVAL, but in microseconds
not milliseconds as originally intended.

Found by code inspection.

Simon Riggs
2016-09-09 11:45:40 +01:00
Andres Freund
f5462dedb7 Fix mdtruncate() to close fd.c handle of deleted segments.
mdtruncate() forgot to FileClose() a segment's mdfd_vfd, when deleting
it. That lead to a fd.c handle to a truncated file being kept open until
backend exit.

The issue appears to have been introduced way back in 1a5c450f30,
before that the handle was closed inside FileUnlink().

The impact of this bug is limited - only VACUUM and ON COMMIT TRUNCATE
for temporary tables, truncate files in place (i.e. TRUNCATE itself is
not affected), and the relation has to be bigger than 1GB. The
consequences of a leaked fd.c handle aren't severe either.

Discussion: <20160908220748.oqh37ukwqqncbl3n@alap3.anarazel.de>
Backpatch: all supported releases
2016-09-08 16:52:13 -07:00
Tom Lane
942ad33b20 Add regression test coverage for non-default timezone abbreviation sets.
After further reflection about the mess cleaned up in commit 39b691f25,
I decided the main bit of test coverage that was still missing was to
check that the non-default abbreviation-set files we supply are usable.
Add that.

Back-patch to supported branches, just because it seems like a good
idea to keep this all in sync.
2016-09-04 20:02:16 -04:00
Tom Lane
88c3f56f09 Remove vestigial references to "zic" in favor of "IANA database".
Commit b2cbced9e instituted a policy of referring to the timezone database
as the "IANA timezone database" in our user-facing documentation.
Propagate that wording into a couple of places that were still using "zic"
to refer to the database, which is definitely not right (zic is the
compilation tool, not the data).

Back-patch, not because this is very important in itself, but because
we routinely cherry-pick updates to the tznames files and I don't want
to risk future merge failures.
2016-09-04 19:42:47 -04:00
Tom Lane
1195b8efe6 Don't require dynamic timezone abbreviations to match underlying time zone.
Previously, we threw an error if a dynamic timezone abbreviation did not
match any abbreviation recorded in the referenced IANA time zone entry.
That seemed like a good consistency check at the time, but it turns out
that a number of the abbreviations in the IANA database are things that
Olson and crew made up out of whole cloth.  Their current policy is to
remove such names in favor of using simple numeric offsets.  Perhaps
unsurprisingly, a lot of these made-up abbreviations have varied in meaning
over time, which meant that our commit b2cbced9e and later changes made
them into dynamic abbreviations.  So with newer IANA database versions
that don't mention these abbreviations at all, we fail, as reported in bug
#14307 from Neil Anderson.  It's worse than just a few unused-in-the-wild
abbreviations not working, because the pg_timezone_abbrevs view stops
working altogether (since its underlying function tries to compute the
whole view result in one call).

We considered deleting these abbreviations from our abbreviations list, but
the problem with that is that we can't stay ahead of possible future IANA
changes.  Instead, let's leave the abbreviations list alone, and treat any
"orphaned" dynamic abbreviation as just meaning the referenced time zone.
It will behave a bit differently than it used to, in that you can't any
longer override the zone's standard vs. daylight rule by using the "wrong"
abbreviation of a pair, but that's better than failing entirely.  (Also,
this solution can be interpreted as adding a small new feature, which is
that any abbreviation a user wants can be defined as referencing a time
zone name.)

Back-patch to all supported branches, since this problem affects all
of them when using tzdata 2016f or newer.

Report: <20160902031551.15674.67337@wrigleys.postgresql.org>
Discussion: <6189.1472820913@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-09-02 17:29:32 -04:00
Tom Lane
b9ac11a298 Suppress GCC 6 warning about self-comparison
Back-patch commit a2fd62dd53
into older branches.  Per complaint from Pavel Stehule.
2016-09-01 12:48:06 -04:00
Tom Lane
823df401d1 Prevent starting a standalone backend with standby_mode on.
This can't really work because standby_mode expects there to be more
WAL arriving, which there will not ever be because there's no WAL
receiver process to fetch it.  Moreover, if standby_mode is on then
hot standby might also be turned on, causing even more strangeness
because that expects read-only sessions to be executing in parallel.
Bernd Helmle reported a case where btree_xlog_delete_get_latestRemovedXid
got confused, but rather than band-aiding individual problems it seems
best to prevent getting anywhere near this state in the first place.
Back-patch to all supported branches.

In passing, also fix some omissions of errcodes in other ereport's in
readRecoveryCommandFile().

Michael Paquier (errcode hacking by me)

Discussion: <00F0B2CEF6D0CEF8A90119D4@eje.credativ.lan>
2016-08-31 08:52:13 -04:00
Tom Lane
da14d46705 Fix instability in parallel regression tests.
Commit f0c7b789a added a test case in case.sql that creates and then drops
both an '=' operator and the type it's for.  Given the right timing, that
can cause a "cache lookup failed for type" failure in concurrent sessions,
which see the '=' operator as a potential match for '=' in a query, but
then the type is gone by the time they inquire into its properties.
It might be nice to make that behavior more robust someday, but as a
back-patchable solution, adjust the new test case so that the operator
is never visible to other sessions.  Like the previous commit, back-patch
to all supported branches.

Discussion: <5983.1471371667@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-08-25 09:57:41 -04:00
Tom Lane
2376638974 Fix improper repetition of previous results from a hashed aggregate.
ExecReScanAgg's check for whether it could re-use a previously calculated
hashtable neglected the possibility that the Agg node might reference
PARAM_EXEC Params that are not referenced by its input plan node.  That's
okay if the Params are in upper tlist or qual expressions; but if one
appears in aggregate input expressions, then the hashtable contents need
to be recomputed when the Param's value changes.

To avoid unnecessary performance degradation in the case of a Param that
isn't within an aggregate input, add logic to the planner to determine
which Params are within aggregate inputs.  This requires a new field in
struct Agg, but fortunately we never write plans to disk, so this isn't
an initdb-forcing change.

Per report from Jeevan Chalke.  This has been broken since forever,
so back-patch to all supported branches.

Andrew Gierth, with minor adjustments by me

Report: <CAM2+6=VY8ykfLT5Q8vb9B6EbeBk-NGuLbT6seaQ+Fq4zXvrDcA@mail.gmail.com>
2016-08-24 14:37:51 -04:00
Magnus Hagander
35982db498 Update Windows timezone mapping from Windows 7 and 10
This adds a couple of new timezones that are present in the newer
versions of Windows. It also updates comments to reference UTC rather
than GMT, as this change has been made in Windows.

Michael Paquier
2016-08-18 15:35:43 +02:00
Tom Lane
9d5bf77b59 Remove bogus dependencies on NUMERIC_MAX_PRECISION.
NUMERIC_MAX_PRECISION is a purely arbitrary constraint on the precision
and scale you can write in a numeric typmod.  It might once have had
something to do with the allowed range of a typmod-less numeric value,
but at least since 9.1 we've allowed, and documented that we allowed,
any value that would physically fit in the numeric storage format;
which is something over 100000 decimal digits, not 1000.

Hence, get rid of numeric_in()'s use of NUMERIC_MAX_PRECISION as a limit
on the allowed range of the exponent in scientific-format input.  That was
especially silly in view of the fact that you can enter larger numbers as
long as you don't use 'e' to do it.  Just constrain the value enough to
avoid localized overflow, and let make_result be the final arbiter of what
is too large.  Likewise adjust ecpg's equivalent of this code.

Also get rid of numeric_recv()'s use of NUMERIC_MAX_PRECISION to limit the
number of base-NBASE digits it would accept.  That created a dump/restore
hazard for binary COPY without doing anything useful; the wire-format
limit on number of digits (65535) is about as tight as we would want.

In HEAD, also get rid of pg_size_bytes()'s unnecessary intimacy with what
the numeric range limit is.  That code doesn't exist in the back branches.

Per gripe from Aravind Kumar.  Back-patch to all supported branches,
since they all contain the documentation claim about allowed range of
NUMERIC (cf commit cabf5d84b).

Discussion: <2895.1471195721@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-08-14 15:06:02 -04:00
Tom Lane
8c44731acb Fix regression test parallel-make hazard.
Back-patch 9.4-era commit 384f933046 into
the previous branches.  Although that was only advertised as repairing a
problem with missed header-file dependencies, it turns out to also be
important for parallel make safety.  The previous coding allowed two
independent make jobs to get launched concurrently in contrib/spi.
Normally this would be OK, because they are building independent targets;
but if --enable-depend is in use, it's unsafe, because one make run might
try to read a .deps file that the other one is in process of rewriting.
This is evidently the cause of buildfarm member francolin's recent failure
in the 9.2 branch.  I believe this patch will result in only one subsidiary
make run, making it safe(r).

Report: http://buildfarm.postgresql.org/cgi-bin/show_log.pl?nm=francolin&dt=2016-08-12%2017%3A12%3A52
2016-08-12 20:51:59 -04:00
Tom Lane
ceb005319a Fix inappropriate printing of never-measured times in EXPLAIN.
EXPLAIN (ANALYZE, TIMING OFF) would print an elapsed time of zero for
a trigger function, because no measurement has been taken but it printed
the field anyway.  This isn't what EXPLAIN does elsewhere, so suppress it.

In the same vein, EXPLAIN (ANALYZE, BUFFERS) with non-text output format
would print buffer I/O timing numbers even when no measurement has been
taken because track_io_timing is off.  That seems not per policy, either,
so change it.

Back-patch to 9.2 where these features were introduced.

Maksim Milyutin

Discussion: <081c0540-ecaa-bd29-3fd2-6358f3b359a9@postgrespro.ru>
2016-08-12 12:13:04 -04:00
Tom Lane
01de6f3fd8 Stamp 9.2.18. 2016-08-08 16:33:27 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
b0134fe84d Fix several one-byte buffer over-reads in to_number
Several places in NUM_numpart_from_char(), which is called from the SQL
function to_number(text, text), could accidentally read one byte past
the end of the input buffer (which comes from the input text datum and
is not null-terminated).

1. One leading space character would be skipped, but there was no check
   that the input was at least one byte long.  This does not happen in
   practice, but for defensiveness, add a check anyway.

2. Commit 4a3a1e2cf apparently accidentally doubled that code that skips
   one space character (so that two spaces might be skipped), but there
   was no overflow check before skipping the second byte.  Fix by
   removing that duplicate code.

3. A logic error would allow a one-byte over-read when looking for a
   trailing sign (S) placeholder.

In each case, the extra byte cannot be read out directly, but looking at
it might cause a crash.

The third item was discovered by Piotr Stefaniak, the first two were
found and analyzed by Tom Lane and Peter Eisentraut.
2016-08-08 11:13:45 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
e990c738b4 Translation updates
Source-Git-URL: git://git.postgresql.org/git/pgtranslation/messages.git
Source-Git-Hash: 940819d75443c03de7554441c3b1e2bc42f76c8f
2016-08-08 10:48:56 -04:00
Tom Lane
8b32516db2 Fix two errors with nested CASE/WHEN constructs.
ExecEvalCase() tried to save a cycle or two by passing
&econtext->caseValue_isNull as the isNull argument to its sub-evaluation of
the CASE value expression.  If that subexpression itself contained a CASE,
then *isNull was an alias for econtext->caseValue_isNull within the
recursive call of ExecEvalCase(), leading to confusion about whether the
inner call's caseValue was null or not.  In the worst case this could lead
to a core dump due to dereferencing a null pointer.  Fix by not assigning
to the global variable until control comes back from the subexpression.
Also, avoid using the passed-in isNull pointer transiently for evaluation
of WHEN expressions.  (Either one of these changes would have been
sufficient to fix the known misbehavior, but it's clear now that each of
these choices was in itself dangerous coding practice and best avoided.
There do not seem to be any similar hazards elsewhere in execQual.c.)

Also, it was possible for inlining of a SQL function that implements the
equality operator used for a CASE comparison to result in one CASE
expression's CaseTestExpr node being inserted inside another CASE
expression.  This would certainly result in wrong answers since the
improperly nested CaseTestExpr would be caused to return the inner CASE's
comparison value not the outer's.  If the CASE values were of different
data types, a crash might result; moreover such situations could be abused
to allow disclosure of portions of server memory.  To fix, teach
inline_function to check for "bare" CaseTestExpr nodes in the arguments of
a function to be inlined, and avoid inlining if there are any.

Heikki Linnakangas, Michael Paquier, Tom Lane

Report: https://github.com/greenplum-db/gpdb/pull/327
Report: <4DDCEEB8.50602@enterprisedb.com>
Security: CVE-2016-5423
2016-08-08 10:33:47 -04:00
Noah Misch
e8f4922c86 Obstruct shell, SQL, and conninfo injection via database and role names.
Due to simplistic quoting and confusion of database names with conninfo
strings, roles with the CREATEDB or CREATEROLE option could escalate to
superuser privileges when a superuser next ran certain maintenance
commands.  The new coding rule for PQconnectdbParams() calls, documented
at conninfo_array_parse(), is to pass expand_dbname=true and wrap
literal database names in a trivial connection string.  Escape
zero-length values in appendConnStrVal().  Back-patch to 9.1 (all
supported versions).

Nathan Bossart, Michael Paquier, and Noah Misch.  Reviewed by Peter
Eisentraut.  Reported by Nathan Bossart.

Security: CVE-2016-5424
2016-08-08 10:07:53 -04:00
Noah Misch
f1d0b09cf1 Promote pg_dumpall shell/connstr quoting functions to src/fe_utils.
Rename these newly-extern functions with terms more typical of their new
neighbors.  No functional changes; a subsequent commit will use them in
more places.  Back-patch to 9.1 (all supported versions).  Back branches
lack src/fe_utils, so instead rename the functions in place; the
subsequent commit will copy them into the other programs using them.

Security: CVE-2016-5424
2016-08-08 10:07:53 -04:00
Noah Misch
a19edcd240 Back-patch "Only quote libpq connection string values that need quoting."
Back-patch commit 2953cd6d17 and certain
runPgDump() bits of 3dee636e04 to 9.2 and
9.1.  This synchronizes their doConnStrQuoting() implementations with
later releases.  Subsequent security patches will modify that function.

Security: CVE-2016-5424
2016-08-08 10:07:53 -04:00
Noah Misch
4837155292 Fix Windows shell argument quoting.
The incorrect quoting may have permitted arbitrary command execution.
At a minimum, it gave broader control over the command line to actors
supposed to have control over a single argument.  Back-patch to 9.1 (all
supported versions).

Security: CVE-2016-5424
2016-08-08 10:07:53 -04:00
Noah Misch
ffbdab65d3 Reject, in pg_dumpall, names containing CR or LF.
These characters prematurely terminate Windows shell command processing,
causing the shell to execute a prefix of the intended command.  The
chief alternative to rejecting these characters was to bypass the
Windows shell with CreateProcess(), but the ability to use such names
has little value.  Back-patch to 9.1 (all supported versions).

This change formally revokes support for these characters in database
names and roles names.  Don't document this; the error message is
self-explanatory, and too few users would benefit.  A future major
release may forbid creation of databases and roles so named.  For now,
check only at known weak points in pg_dumpall.  Future commits will,
without notice, reject affected names from other frontend programs.

Also extend the restriction to pg_dumpall --dbname=CONNSTR arguments and
--file arguments.  Unlike the effects on role name arguments and
database names, this does not reflect a broad policy change.  A
migration to CreateProcess() could lift these two restrictions.

Reviewed by Peter Eisentraut.

Security: CVE-2016-5424
2016-08-08 10:07:53 -04:00
Noah Misch
a466ea33c0 Field conninfo strings throughout src/bin/scripts.
These programs nominally accepted conninfo strings, but they would
proceed to use the original dbname parameter as though it were an
unadorned database name.  This caused "reindexdb dbname=foo" to issue an
SQL command that always failed, and other programs printed a conninfo
string in error messages that purported to print a database name.  Fix
both problems by using PQdb() to retrieve actual database names.
Continue to print the full conninfo string when reporting a connection
failure.  It is informative there, and if the database name is the sole
problem, the server-side error message will include the name.  Beyond
those user-visible fixes, this allows a subsequent commit to synthesize
and use conninfo strings without that implementation detail leaking into
messages.  As a side effect, the "vacuuming database" message now
appears after, not before, the connection attempt.  Back-patch to 9.1
(all supported versions).

Reviewed by Michael Paquier and Peter Eisentraut.

Security: CVE-2016-5424
2016-08-08 10:07:52 -04:00
Noah Misch
f744e8906f Introduce a psql "\connect -reuse-previous=on|off" option.
The decision to reuse values of parameters from a previous connection
has been based on whether the new target is a conninfo string.  Add this
means of overriding that default.  This feature arose as one component
of a fix for security vulnerabilities in pg_dump, pg_dumpall, and
pg_upgrade, so back-patch to 9.1 (all supported versions).  In 9.3 and
later, comment paragraphs that required update had already-incorrect
claims about behavior when no connection is open; fix those problems.

Security: CVE-2016-5424
2016-08-08 10:07:52 -04:00
Noah Misch
0cc3b12d28 Sort out paired double quotes in \connect, \password and \crosstabview.
In arguments, these meta-commands wrongly treated each pair as closing
the double quoted string.  Make the behavior match the documentation.
This is a compatibility break, but I more expect to find software with
untested reliance on the documented behavior than software reliant on
today's behavior.  Back-patch to 9.1 (all supported versions).

Reviewed by Tom Lane and Peter Eisentraut.

Security: CVE-2016-5424
2016-08-08 10:07:52 -04:00
Tom Lane
127d73009a Fix misestimation of n_distinct for a nearly-unique column with many nulls.
If ANALYZE found no repeated non-null entries in its sample, it set the
column's stadistinct value to -1.0, intending to indicate that the entries
are all distinct.  But what this value actually means is that the number
of distinct values is 100% of the table's rowcount, and thus it was
overestimating the number of distinct values by however many nulls there
are.  This could lead to very poor selectivity estimates, as for example
in a recent report from Andreas Joseph Krogh.  We should discount the
stadistinct value by whatever we've estimated the nulls fraction to be.
(That is what will happen if we choose to use a negative stadistinct for
a column that does have repeated entries, so this code path was just
inconsistent.)

In addition to fixing the stadistinct entries stored by several different
ANALYZE code paths, adjust the logic where get_variable_numdistinct()
forces an "all distinct" estimate on the basis of finding a relevant unique
index.  Unique indexes don't reject nulls, so there's no reason to assume
that the null fraction doesn't apply.

Back-patch to all supported branches.  Back-patching is a bit of a judgment
call, but this problem seems to affect only a few users (else we'd have
identified it long ago), and it's bad enough when it does happen that
destabilizing plan choices in a worse direction seems unlikely.

Patch by me, with documentation wording suggested by Dean Rasheed

Report: <VisenaEmail.26.df42f82acae38a58.156463942b8@tc7-visena>
Discussion: <16143.1470350371@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-08-07 18:52:02 -04:00
Tom Lane
3e40d9227f Teach libpq to decode server version correctly from future servers.
Beginning with the next development cycle, PG servers will report two-part
not three-part version numbers.  Fix libpq so that it will compute the
correct numeric representation of such server versions for reporting by
PQserverVersion().  It's desirable to get this into the field and
back-patched ASAP, so that older clients are more likely to understand the
new server version numbering by the time any such servers are in the wild.

(The results with an old client would probably not be catastrophic anyway
for a released server; for example "10.1" would be interpreted as 100100
which would be wrong in detail but would not likely cause an old client to
misbehave badly.  But "10devel" or "10beta1" would result in sversion==0
which at best would result in disabling all use of modern features.)

Extracted from a patch by Peter Eisentraut; comments added by me

Patch: <802ec140-635d-ad86-5fdf-d3af0e260c22@2ndquadrant.com>
2016-08-05 18:58:32 -04:00
Tom Lane
7822792f74 Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2016f.
DST law changes in Kemerovo and Novosibirsk.  Historical corrections for
Azerbaijan, Belarus, and Morocco.  Asia/Novokuznetsk and Asia/Novosibirsk
now use numeric time zone abbreviations instead of invented ones.  Zones
for Antarctic bases and other locations that have been uninhabited for
portions of the time span known to the tzdata database now report "-00"
rather than "zzz" as the zone abbreviation for those time spans.

Also, I decided to remove some of the timezone/data/ files that we don't
use.  At one time that subdirectory was a complete copy of what IANA
distributes in the tzdata tarballs, but that hasn't been true for a long
time.  There seems no good reason to keep shipping those specific files
but not others; they're just bloating our tarballs.
2016-08-05 12:58:58 -04:00
Tom Lane
a5a7caaa1b Fix pg_dump's handling of public schema with both -c and -C options.
Since -c plus -C requests dropping and recreating the target database
as a whole, not dropping individual objects in it, we should assume that
the public schema already exists and need not be created.  The previous
coding considered only the state of the -c option, so it would emit
"CREATE SCHEMA public" anyway, leading to an unexpected error in restore.

Back-patch to 9.2.  Older versions did not accept -c with -C so the
issue doesn't arise there.  (The logic being patched here dates to 8.0,
cf commit 2193121fa, so it's not really wrong that it didn't consider
the case at the time.)

Note that versions before 9.6 will still attempt to emit REVOKE/GRANT
on the public schema; but that happens without -c/-C too, and doesn't
seem to be the focus of this complaint.  I considered extending this
stanza to also skip the public schema's ACL, but that would be a
misfeature, as it'd break cases where users intentionally changed that
ACL.  The real fix for this aspect is Stephen Frost's work to not dump
built-in ACLs, and that's not going to get back-ported.

Per bugs #13804 and #14271.  Solution found by David Johnston and later
rediscovered by me.

Report: <20151207163520.2628.95990@wrigleys.postgresql.org>
Report: <20160801021955.1430.47434@wrigleys.postgresql.org>
2016-08-02 12:49:15 -04:00
Michael Meskes
295edbecf7 Fixed array checking code for "unsigned long long" datatypes in libecpg. 2016-08-01 15:08:48 +02:00
Fujii Masao
a216177599 Fix pg_basebackup so that it accepts 0 as a valid compression level.
The help message for pg_basebackup specifies that the numbers 0 through 9
are accepted as valid values of -Z option. But, previously -Z 0 was rejected
as an invalid compression level.

Per discussion, it's better to make pg_basebackup treat 0 as valid
compression level meaning no compression, like pg_dump.

Back-patch to all supported versions.

Reported-By: Jeff Janes
Reviewed-By: Amit Kapila
Discussion: CAMkU=1x+GwjSayc57v6w87ij6iRGFWt=hVfM0B64b1_bPVKRqg@mail.gmail.com
2016-08-01 17:38:00 +09:00
Tom Lane
76c10ca318 Guard against empty buffer in gets_fromFile()'s check for a newline.
Per the fgets() specification, it cannot return without reading some data
unless it reports EOF or error.  So the code here assumed that the data
buffer would necessarily be nonempty when we go to check for a newline
having been read.  However, Agostino Sarubbo noticed that this could fail
to be true if the first byte of the data is a NUL (\0).  The fgets() API
doesn't really work for embedded NULs, which is something I don't feel
any great need for us to worry about since we generally don't allow NULs
in SQL strings anyway.  But we should not access off the end of our own
buffer if the case occurs.  Normally this would just be a harmless read,
but if you were unlucky the byte before the buffer would contain '\n'
and we'd overwrite it with '\0', and if you were really unlucky that
might be valuable data and psql would crash.

Agostino reported this to pgsql-security, but after discussion we concluded
that it isn't worth treating as a security bug; if you can control the
input to psql you can do far more interesting things than just maybe-crash
it.  Nonetheless, it is a bug, so back-patch to all supported versions.
2016-07-28 18:57:52 -04:00
Tom Lane
7b8526e5d6 Fix assorted fallout from IS [NOT] NULL patch.
Commits 4452000f3 et al established semantics for NullTest.argisrow that
are a bit different from its initial conception: rather than being merely
a cache of whether we've determined the input to have composite type,
the flag now has the further meaning that we should apply field-by-field
testing as per the standard's definition of IS [NOT] NULL.  If argisrow
is false and yet the input has composite type, the construct instead has
the semantics of IS [NOT] DISTINCT FROM NULL.  Update the comments in
primnodes.h to clarify this, and fix ruleutils.c and deparse.c to print
such cases correctly.  In the case of ruleutils.c, this merely results in
cosmetic changes in EXPLAIN output, since the case can't currently arise
in stored rules.  However, it represents a live bug for deparse.c, which
would formerly have sent a remote query that had semantics different
from the local behavior.  (From the user's standpoint, this means that
testing a remote nested-composite column for null-ness could have had
unexpected recursive behavior much like that fixed in 4452000f3.)

In a related but somewhat independent fix, make plancat.c set argisrow
to false in all NullTest expressions constructed to represent "attnotnull"
constructs.  Since attnotnull is actually enforced as a simple null-value
check, this is a more accurate representation of the semantics; we were
previously overpromising what it meant for composite columns, which might
possibly lead to incorrect planner optimizations.  (It seems that what the
SQL spec expects a NOT NULL constraint to mean is an IS NOT NULL test, so
arguably we are violating the spec and should fix attnotnull to do the
other thing.  If we ever do, this part should get reverted.)

Back-patch, same as the previous commit.

Discussion: <10682.1469566308@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-07-28 16:09:15 -04:00
Tom Lane
a9a998180a Improve documentation about CREATE TABLE ... LIKE.
The docs failed to explain that LIKE INCLUDING INDEXES would not preserve
the names of indexes and associated constraints.  Also, it wasn't mentioned
that EXCLUDE constraints would be copied by this option.  The latter
oversight seems enough of a documentation bug to justify back-patching.

In passing, do some minor copy-editing in the same area, and add an entry
for LIKE under "Compatibility", since it's not exactly a faithful
implementation of the standard's feature.

Discussion: <20160728151154.AABE64016B@smtp.hushmail.com>
2016-07-28 13:26:59 -04:00
Tom Lane
bcdd8a1949 Fix constant-folding of ROW(...) IS [NOT] NULL with composite fields.
The SQL standard appears to specify that IS [NOT] NULL's tests of field
nullness are non-recursive, ie, we shouldn't consider that a composite
field with value ROW(NULL,NULL) is null for this purpose.
ExecEvalNullTest got this right, but eval_const_expressions did not,
leading to weird inconsistencies depending on whether the expression
was such that the planner could apply constant folding.

Also, adjust the docs to mention that IS [NOT] DISTINCT FROM NULL can be
used as a substitute test if a simple null check is wanted for a rowtype
argument.  That motivated reordering things so that IS [NOT] DISTINCT FROM
is described before IS [NOT] NULL.  In HEAD, I went a bit further and added
a table showing all the comparison-related predicates.

Per bug #14235.  Back-patch to all supported branches, since it's certainly
undesirable that constant-folding should change the semantics.

Report and patch by Andrew Gierth; assorted wordsmithing and revised
regression test cases by me.

Report: <20160708024746.1410.57282@wrigleys.postgresql.org>
2016-07-26 15:25:02 -04:00
Noah Misch
a4daf59eef Make the AIX case of Makefile.shlib safe for parallel make.
Use our typical approach, from src/backend/parser.  Back-patch to 9.1
(all supported versions).
2016-07-23 20:30:55 -04:00
Tom Lane
52502e7a59 Make pltcl regression tests safe for Danish locale.
Another peculiarity of Danish locale is that it has an unusual idea
of how to sort upper vs. lower case.  One of the pltcl test cases has
an issue with that.  Now that COLLATE works in all supported branches,
we can just change the test to be locale-independent, and get rid of
the variant expected file that used to support non-C locales.
2016-07-21 14:24:07 -04:00
Tom Lane
4d37b7cffc Fix MSVC build for changes in zic.
Ooops, I missed back-patching commit f5f15ea6a along with the other stuff.
2016-07-19 17:53:31 -04:00