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author | Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> | 2014-05-29 13:51:12 -0400 |
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committer | Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> | 2014-05-29 13:51:12 -0400 |
commit | 3606754da9928de4669df7a29d9500d7da5693b9 (patch) | |
tree | 7ee6d5bbbef58dd2e6167d44c552aa73384b0bd4 /src/backend/tcop/postgres.c | |
parent | 43c658f523dafa000eb887ddfa876700f07c745f (diff) | |
download | postgresql-3606754da9928de4669df7a29d9500d7da5693b9.tar.gz postgresql-3606754da9928de4669df7a29d9500d7da5693b9.zip |
When using the OSSP UUID library, cache its uuid_t state object.
The original coding in contrib/uuid-ossp created and destroyed a uuid_t
object (or, in some cases, even two of them) each time it was called.
This is not the intended usage: you're supposed to keep the uuid_t object
around so that the library can cache its state across uses. (Other UUID
libraries seem to keep equivalent state behind-the-scenes in static
variables, but OSSP chose differently.) Aside from being quite inefficient,
creating a new uuid_t loses knowledge of the previously generated UUID,
which in theory could result in duplicate V1-style UUIDs being created
on sufficiently fast machines.
On at least some platforms, creating a new uuid_t also draws some entropy
from /dev/urandom, leaving less for the rest of the system. This seems
sufficiently unpleasant to justify back-patching this change.
Diffstat (limited to 'src/backend/tcop/postgres.c')
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