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author | Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> | 2020-07-11 13:36:51 -0400 |
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committer | Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> | 2020-07-11 13:36:51 -0400 |
commit | 2d43c3057c971e63d1b7389d830dabe6c3ea368a (patch) | |
tree | c3b4bcd3038aad421a16a6d92b96d8021381d222 /src/common/file_utils.c | |
parent | da76f05e276caea502b04365b136d719237667e8 (diff) | |
download | postgresql-2d43c3057c971e63d1b7389d830dabe6c3ea368a.tar.gz postgresql-2d43c3057c971e63d1b7389d830dabe6c3ea368a.zip |
Avoid trying to restore table ACLs and per-column ACLs in parallel.
Parallel pg_restore has always supposed that ACL items for different
objects are independent and can be restored in parallel without
conflicts. However, there is one case where this fails: because
REVOKE on a table is defined to also revoke the privilege(s) at
column level, we can't restore per-column ACLs till after we restore
any table-level privileges on their table. Failure to honor this
restriction can lead to "tuple concurrently updated" errors during
parallel restore, or even to the per-column ACLs silently disappearing
because the table-level REVOKE is executed afterwards.
To fix, add a dependency from each column-level ACL item to its table's
ACL item, if there is one. Note that this doesn't fix the hazard
for pre-existing archive files, only for ones made with a corrected
pg_dump. Given that the bug's been there quite awhile without
field reports, I think this is acceptable.
This requires changing the API of pg_dump's dumpACL() function.
To keep its argument list from getting even longer, I removed the
"CatalogId objCatId" argument, which has been unused for ages.
Per report from Justin Pryzby. Back-patch to all supported branches.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200706050129.GW4107@telsasoft.com
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