aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/src/backend
Commit message (Collapse)AuthorAge
...
* Fix mis-calculation of extParam/allParam sets for plan nodes, as seen inTom Lane2008-07-10
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | bug #4290. The fundamental bug is that masking extParam by outer_params, as finalize_plan had been doing, caused us to lose the information that an initPlan depended on the output of a sibling initPlan. On reflection the best thing to do seemed to be not to try to adjust outer_params for this case but get rid of it entirely. The only thing it was really doing for us was to filter out param IDs associated with SubPlan nodes, and that can be done (with greater accuracy) while processing individual SubPlan nodes in finalize_primnode. This approach was vindicated by the discovery that the masking method was hiding a second bug: SS_finalize_plan failed to remove extParam bits for initPlan output params that were referenced in the main plan tree (it only got rid of those referenced by other initPlans). It's not clear that this caused any real problems, given the limited use of extParam by the executor, but it's certainly not what was intended. I originally thought that there was also a problem with needing to include indirect dependencies on external params in initPlans' param sets, but it turns out that the executor handles this correctly so long as the depended-on initPlan is earlier in the initPlans list than the one using its output. That seems a bit of a fragile assumption, but it is true at the moment, so I just documented it in some code comments rather than making what would be rather invasive changes to remove the assumption. Back-patch to 8.1. Previous versions don't have the case of initPlans referring to other initPlans' outputs, so while the existing logic is still questionable for them, there are not any known bugs to be fixed. So I'll refrain from changing them for now.
* Fix performance bug in write_syslog(): the code to preferentially break theTom Lane2008-07-08
| | | | | | | | | | log message at newlines cost O(N^2) for very long messages with few or no newlines. For messages in the megabyte range this became the dominant cost. Per gripe from Achilleas Mantzios. Patch all the way back, since this is a safe change with no portability risks. I am also thinking of increasing PG_SYSLOG_LIMIT, but that should be done separately.
* Fix estimate_num_groups() to assume that GROUP BY expressions yielding booleanTom Lane2008-07-07
| | | | | | | | | results always contribute two groups, regardless of the expression contents. This is very substantially more accurate than the regular heuristic for certain boolean tests like "col IS NULL". Per gripe from Sam Mason. Back-patch to all supported releases, since the behavior of estimate_num_groups() hasn't changed all that much since 7.4.
* Fix AT TIME ZONE (in all three variants) so that we first try to interpretTom Lane2008-07-07
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | the timezone argument as a timezone abbreviation, and only try it as a full timezone name if that fails. The zic database has four zones (CET, EET, MET, WET) that are full daylight-savings zones and yet have names that are the same as their abbreviations for standard time, resulting in ambiguity. In the timestamp input functions we resolve the ambiguity by preferring the abbreviation, and AT TIME ZONE should work the same way. (No functionality is lost because the zic database also has other names for these zones, eg Europe/Zurich.) Per gripe from Jaromir Talir. Backpatch to 8.1. Older releases did not have the issue because AT TIME ZONE only accepted abbreviations not zone names. (Thus, this patch also arguably fixes a compatibility botch introduced at 8.1: in ambiguous cases we now behave the same as 8.0 did.)
* Prevent integer overflows during units conversion when displaying a GUCTom Lane2008-07-06
| | | | | | | | | | | | variable that has units. Per report from Stefan Kaltenbrunner. Backport to 8.2. I also backported my patch of 2007-06-21 that prevented comparable overflows on the input side, since that now seems to have enough field track record to be back-patched safely. That patch included addition of hints listing the available unit names, which I did not bother to strip out of it --- this will make a little more work for the translators, but they can copy the translation from 8.3, and anyway an untranslated hint is better than no hint.
* Fix 'pg_ctl reload' to properly preserve postmaster commend-lineBruce Momjian2008-06-27
| | | | arguments on restart. Patch to releases 8.0 - 8.3.X.
* Fix bug in the WAL recovery code to finish an incomplete split.Heikki Linnakangas2008-06-11
| | | | | | | CacheInvalidateRelcache() crashes if called in WAL recovery, because the invalidation infrastructure hasn't been initialized yet. Back-patch to 8.2, where the bug was introduced.
* Fix datetime input functions to correctly detect integer overflow whenTom Lane2008-06-09
| | | | | running on a 64-bit platform ... strtol() will happily return 64-bit output in that case. Per bug #4231 from Geoff Tolley.
* ALTER AGGREGATE OWNER seems to have been missed by the last couple ofTom Lane2008-06-08
| | | | | | | patches that dealt with object ownership. It wasn't updating pg_shdepend nor adjusting the aggregate's ACL. In 8.2 and up, fix this permanently by making it use AlterFunctionOwner_oid. In 8.1, the function code wasn't factored that way, so just copy and paste.
* Fix pg_get_ruledef() so that negative numeric constants are parenthesized.Tom Lane2008-06-06
| | | | | | | | | | This is needed because :: casting binds more tightly than minus, so for example -1::integer is not the same as (-1)::integer, and there are cases where the difference is important. In particular this caused a failure in SELECT DISTINCT ... ORDER BY ... where expressions that should have matched were seen as different by the parser; but I suspect that there could be other cases where failure to parenthesize leads to subtler semantic differences in reloaded rules. Per report from Alexandr Popov.
* Translation updates.Tom Lane2008-06-05
|
* Backpatch Zdenek Kotala's fix to prevent pglz_decompress from stomping onTom Lane2008-05-28
| | | | | | | | memory if the compressed data is corrupt. Backpatch as far as 8.2. The issue exists in older branches too, but given the lack of field reports, it's not clear it's worth any additional effort to adapt the patch to the slightly different code in older branches.
* Back-patch the 8.3 fix that prohibits TRUNCATE, CLUSTER, and REINDEX when theTom Lane2008-05-27
| | | | | | | current transaction has any open references to the target relation or index (implying it has an active query using the relation). Also back-patch the 8.2 fix that prohibits TRUNCATE and CLUSTER when there are pending AFTER-trigger events. Per suggestion from Heikki.
* Explicitly bind gettext() to the UTF8 locale when in use.Magnus Hagander2008-05-27
| | | | | | | | | | This is required on Windows due to the special locale handling for UTF8 that doesn't change the full environment. Fixes crash with translated error messages per bugs 4180 and 4196. Tom Lane
* Fix an old corner-case bug in set_config_option: push_old_value has to beTom Lane2008-05-26
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | called before, not after, calling the assign_hook if any. This is because push_old_value might fail (due to palloc out-of-memory), and in that case there would be no stack entry to tell transaction abort to undo the GUC assignment. Of course the actual assignment to the GUC variable hasn't happened yet --- but the assign_hook might have altered subsidiary state. Without a stack entry we won't call it again to make it undo such actions. So this is necessary to make the world safe for assign_hooks with side effects. Per a discussion a couple weeks ago with Magnus. Back-patch to 8.0. 7.x did not have the problem because it did not have allocatable stacks of GUC values.
* Remove arbitrary 10MB limit on two-phase state file size. It's not that hardHeikki Linnakangas2008-05-19
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | to go beoynd 10MB, as demonstrated by Gavin Sharry's example of dropping a schema with ~25000 objects. The really bogus thing about the limit was that it was enforced when a state file file was read in, not when it was written, so you would end up with a prepared transaction that you can't commit or abort, and the only recourse was to shut down the server and remove the file by hand. Raise the limit to MaxAllocSize, and enforce it also when a state file is written. We could've removed the limit altogether, but reading in a file larger than MaxAllocSize would fail anyway because we read it into a palloc'd buffer. Backpatch down to 8.1, where 2PC and this issue was introduced.
* Don't try to close negative file descriptors, since this can causeMagnus Hagander2008-05-13
| | | | | | | crashes on certain platforms. In particular, the MSVC runtime is known to do this. Fixes bug #4162, reported and diagnosed by Javier Pimas
* Fix an ancient oversight in change_varattnos_of_a_node: it neglected to updateTom Lane2008-05-09
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | varoattno along with varattno. This resulted in having Vars that were not seen as equal(), causing inheritance of the "same" constraint from different parent relations to fail. An example is create table pp1 (f1 int check (f1>0)); create table cc1 (f2 text, f3 int) inherits (pp1); create table cc2(f4 float) inherits(pp1,cc1); Backpatch as far as 7.4. (The test case still fails in 7.4, for reasons that I don't feel like investigating at the moment.) This is a backpatch commit only. The fix will be applied in HEAD as part of the upcoming pg_constraint patch.
* The 8.2 patch that added support for an alias on the target table ofTom Lane2008-05-03
| | | | | UPDATE/DELETE forgot to teach ruleutils.c to display the alias. Per bug #4141 from Mathias Seiler.
* Fix ALTER TABLE ADD COLUMN ... PRIMARY KEY so that the new column is correctlyTom Lane2008-04-24
| | | | | | | | | | checked to see if it's been initialized to all non-nulls. The implicit NOT NULL constraint was not being checked during the ALTER (in fact, not even if there was an explicit NOT NULL too), because ATExecAddColumn neglected to set the flag needed to make the test happen. This has been broken since the capability was first added, in 8.0. Brendan Jurd, per a report from Kaloyan Iliev.
* Fix using too many LWLocks bug, reported by Craig RingerTeodor Sigaev2008-04-22
| | | | | | | <craig@postnewspapers.com.au>. It was my mistake, I missed limitation of number of held locks, now GIN doesn't use continiuous locks, but still hold buffers pinned to prevent interference with vacuum's deletion algorithm.
* Repair two places where SIGTERM exit could leave shared memory stateTom Lane2008-04-17
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | corrupted. (Neither is very important if SIGTERM is used to shut down the whole database cluster together, but there's a problem if someone tries to SIGTERM individual backends.) To do this, introduce new infrastructure macros PG_ENSURE_ERROR_CLEANUP/PG_END_ENSURE_ERROR_CLEANUP that take care of transiently pushing an on_shmem_exit cleanup hook. Also use this method for createdb cleanup --- that wasn't a shared-memory-corruption problem, but SIGTERM abort of createdb could leave orphaned files lying around. Backpatch as far as 8.2. The shmem corruption cases don't exist in 8.1, and the createdb usage doesn't seem important enough to risk backpatching further.
* Fix LOAD_CRIT_INDEX() macro to take out AccessShareLock on the system indexTom Lane2008-04-16
| | | | | | | | | | it is trying to build a relcache entry for. This is an oversight in my 8.2 patch that tried to ensure we always took a lock on a relation before trying to build its relcache entry. The implication is that if someone committed a reindex of a critical system index at about the same time that some other backend were starting up without a valid pg_internal.init file, the second one might PANIC due to not seeing any valid version of the index's pg_class row. Improbable case, but definitely not impossible.
* Fix several datatype input functions that were allowing unused bytes in theirTom Lane2008-04-11
| | | | | | | | | | | | | results to contain uninitialized, unpredictable values. While this was okay as far as the datatypes themselves were concerned, it's a problem for the parser because occurrences of the "same" literal might not be recognized as equal by datumIsEqual (and hence not by equal()). It seems sufficient to fix this in the input functions since the only critical use of equal() is in the parser's comparisons of ORDER BY and DISTINCT expressions. Per a trouble report from Marc Cousin. Patch all the way back. Interestingly, array_in did not have the bug before 8.2, which may explain why the issue went unnoticed for so long.
* Defend against JOINs having more than 32K columns altogether. We cannotTom Lane2008-04-05
| | | | | | | | | | | | currently support this because we must be able to build Vars referencing join columns, and varattno is only 16 bits wide. Perhaps this should be improved in future, but considering that it never came up before, I'm not sure the problem is worth much effort. Per bug #4070 from Marcello Ceschia. The problem seems largely academic in 8.0 and 7.4, because they have (different) O(N^2) performance issues with such wide joins, but back-patch all the way anyway.
* Fix a number of places that were making file-type tests infelicitously.Tom Lane2008-03-31
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The places that did, eg, (statbuf.st_mode & S_IFMT) == S_IFDIR were correct, but there is no good reason not to use S_ISDIR() instead, especially when that's what the other 90% of our code does. The places that did, eg, (statbuf.st_mode & S_IFDIR) were flat out *wrong* and would fail in various platform-specific ways, eg a symlink could be mistaken for a regular file on most Unixen. The actual impact of this is probably small, since the problem cases seem to always involve symlinks or sockets, which are unlikely to be found in the directories that PG code might be scanning. But it's clearly trouble waiting to happen, so patch all the way back anyway. (There seem to be no occurrences of the mistake in 7.4.)
* Add the missing cyrillic "Yo" characters ('e' and 'E' with two dots) to theHeikki Linnakangas2008-03-20
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | ISO_8859-5 <-> MULE_INTERNAL conversion tables. This was discovered when trying to convert a string containing those characters from ISO_8859-5 to Windows-1251, because we use MULE_INTERNAL/KOI8R as an intermediate encoding between those two. While the missing "Yo" was just an omission in the conversion tables, there are a few other characters like the "Numero" sign ("No" as a single character) that exists in all the other cyrillic encodings (win1251, ISO_8859-5 and cp866), but not in KOI8R. Added comments about that. Patch by Sergey Burladyan. Back-patch to 7.4.
* Fix regexp substring matching (substring(string from pattern)) for the cornerTom Lane2008-03-19
| | | | | | | | | | | | case where there is a match to the pattern overall but the user has specified a parenthesized subexpression and that subexpression hasn't got a match. An example is substring('foo' from 'foo(bar)?'). This should return NULL, since (bar) isn't matched, but it was mistakenly returning the whole-pattern match instead (ie, 'foo'). Per bug #4044 from Rui Martins. This has been broken since the beginning; patch in all supported versions. The old behavior was sufficiently inconsistent that it's impossible to believe anyone is depending on it.
* Translation updatesREL8_2_7Peter Eisentraut2008-03-14
|
* Fix varstr_cmp's special case for UTF8 encoding on Windows so that stringsTom Lane2008-03-13
| | | | | | | | | | | | that are reported as "equal" by wcscoll() are checked to see if they really are bitwise equal, and are sorted per strcmp() if not. We made this happen a couple of years ago in the regular code path, but it unaccountably got left out of the Windows/UTF8 case (probably brain fade on my part at the time). As in the prior set of changes, affected users may need to reindex indexes on textual columns. Backpatch as far as 8.2, which is the oldest release we are still supporting on Windows.
* Fix LISTEN/NOTIFY race condition reported by Laurent Birtz, by postponingTom Lane2008-03-12
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | pg_listener modifications commanded by LISTEN and UNLISTEN until the end of the current transaction. This allows us to hold the ExclusiveLock on pg_listener until after commit, with no greater risk of deadlock than there was before. Aside from fixing the race condition, this gets rid of a truly ugly kludge that was there before, namely having to ignore HeapTupleBeingUpdated failures during NOTIFY. There is a small potential incompatibility, which is that if a transaction issues LISTEN or UNLISTEN and then looks into pg_listener before committing, it won't see any resulting row insertion or deletion, where before it would have. It seems unlikely that anyone would be depending on that, though. This patch also disallows LISTEN and UNLISTEN inside a prepared transaction. That case had some pretty undesirable properties already, such as possibly allowing pg_listener entries to be made for PIDs no longer present, so disallowing it seems like a better idea than trying to maintain the behavior.
* Change hashscan.c to keep its list of active hash index scans inTom Lane2008-03-07
| | | | | | | | | | | | | TopMemoryContext, rather than scattered through executor per-query contexts. This poses no danger of memory leak since the ResourceOwner mechanism guarantees release of no-longer-needed items. It is needed because the per-query context might already be released by the time we try to clean up the hash scan list. Report by ykhuang, diagnosis by Heikki. Back-patch to 8.0, where the ResourceOwner-based cleanup was introduced. The given test case does not fail before 8.2, probably because we rearranged transaction abort processing somehow; but this coding is undoubtedly risky so I'll patch 8.0 and 8.1 anyway.
* Add support for dlopen on recent NetBSD/MIPS, per Rémi Zara.Alvaro Herrera2008-03-05
|
* In PrepareToInvalidateCacheTuple, don't force initialization of catalogTom Lane2008-03-05
| | | | | | | | | | caches that we don't actually need to touch. This saves some trivial number of cycles and avoids certain cases of deadlock when doing concurrent VACUUM FULL on system catalogs. Per report from Gavin Roy. Backpatch to 8.2. In earlier versions, CatalogCacheInitializeCache didn't lock the relation so there's no deadlock risk (though that certainly had plenty of risks of its own).
* Fix PREPARE TRANSACTION to reject the case where the transaction has dropped aTom Lane2008-03-04
| | | | | | | temporary table; we can't support that because there's no way to clean up the source backend's internal state if the eventual COMMIT PREPARED is done by another backend. This was checked correctly in 8.1 but I broke it in 8.2 :-(. Patch by Heikki Linnakangas, original trouble report by John Smith.
* Fix several memory leaks when rescanning SRFs. Arrange for an SRF'sNeil Conway2008-02-29
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | "multi_call_ctx" to be a distinct sub-context of the EState's per-query context, and delete the multi_call_ctx as soon as the SRF finishes execution. This avoids leaking SRF memory until the end of the current query, which is particularly egregious when the SRF is scanned multiple times. This change also fixes a leak of the fields of the AttInMetadata struct in shutdown_MultiFuncCall(). Also fix a leak of the SRF result TupleDesc when rescanning a FunctionScan node. The TupleDesc is allocated in the per-query context for every call to ExecMakeTableFunctionResult(), so we should free it after calling that function. Since the SRF might choose to return a non-expendable TupleDesc, we only free the TupleDesc if it is not being reference-counted. Backpatch to 8.3 and 8.2 stable branches.
* If RelationBuildDesc() fails to open a critical system index, PANIC withTom Lane2008-02-27
| | | | | a relevant error message instead of just dumping core. Odd that nobody reported this before Darren Reed.
* Fix datetime input to behave correctly for Feb 29 in years BC.Tom Lane2008-02-25
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Formerly, DecodeDate attempted to verify the day-of-the-month exactly, but it was under the misapprehension that it would know whether we were looking at a BC year or not. In reality this check can't be made until the calling function (eg DecodeDateTime) has processed all the fields. So, split the BC adjustment and validity checks out into a new function ValidateDate that is called only after processing all the fields. In passing, this patch makes DecodeTimeOnly work for BC inputs, which it never did before. (The historical veracity of all this is nonexistent, of course, but if we're going to say we support proleptic Gregorian calendar then we should do it correctly. In any case the unpatched code is broken because it could emit dates that it would then reject on re-inputting.) Per report from Bernd Helmle. Back-patch as far as 8.0; in 7.x we were not using our own calendar support and so this seems a bit too risky to put into 7.4.
* Avoid trying to print a NULL char pointer in --describe-config. On someTom Lane2008-02-23
| | | | platforms this works, but on some it crashes. Zdenek Kotala
* Put a CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS call into the loops that try to find a unique newTom Lane2008-02-20
| | | | | | | | | | OID or new relfilenode. If the existing OIDs are sufficiently densely populated, this could take a long time (perhaps even be an infinite loop), so it seems wise to allow the system to respond to a cancel interrupt here. Per a gripe from Jacky Leng. Backpatch as far as 8.1. Older versions just fail on OID collision, instead of looping.
* Repair VACUUM FULL bug introduced by HOT patch: the original way ofTom Lane2008-02-11
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | calculating a page's initial free space was fine, and should not have been "improved" by letting PageGetHeapFreeSpace do it. VACUUM FULL is going to reclaim LP_DEAD line pointers later, so there is no need for a guard against the page being too full of line pointers, and having one risks rejecting pages that are perfectly good move destinations. This also exposed a second bug, which is that the empty_end_pages logic assumed that any page with no live tuples would get entered into the fraged_pages list automatically (by virtue of having more free space than the threshold in the do_frag calculation). This assumption certainly seems risky when a low fillfactor has been chosen, and even without tunable fillfactor I think it could conceivably fail on a page with many unused line pointers. So fix the code to force do_frag true when notup is true, and patch this part of the fix all the way back. Per report from Tomas Szepe.
* Some variants of ALTER OWNER tried to make the "object" field of theTom Lane2008-02-07
| | | | | | | | | | statement be a list of bare C strings, rather than String nodes, which is what they need to be for copyfuncs/equalfuncs to work. Fortunately these node types never go out to disk (if they did, we'd likely have noticed the problem sooner), so we can just fix it without creating a need for initdb. This bug has been there since 8.0, but 8.3 exposes it in a more common code path (Parse messages) than prior releases did. Per bug #3940 from Vladimir Kokovic.
* Fix WaitOnLock() to ensure that the process's "waiting" flag is reset afterTom Lane2008-02-02
| | | | | | | | | | | | | erroring out of a wait. We can use a PG_TRY block for this, but add a comment explaining why it'd be a bad idea to use it for any other state cleanup. Back-patch to 8.2. Prior releases had the same issue, but only with respect to the process title, which is likely to get reset almost immediately anyway after the transaction aborts, so it seems not worth changing them. In 8.2 and HEAD, the pg_stat_activity "waiting" flag could remain set incorrectly for a long time. Per report from Gurjeet Singh.
* Add pid to the pgident event name on win32.Magnus Hagander2008-01-31
| | | | | | | | | Should fix a problem where two clusters are running under two different service accounts and get colliding names, causing only the first cluster to contain the pgident event description. Per report from Stephen Denne.
* Backpatch my fix of rev 1.48 to avoid a division-by-zero error in theAlvaro Herrera2008-01-17
| | | | cost-limit vacuum code. Per trouble report from Joshua Drake.
* Fix subselect.c to avoid assuming that a SubLink's testexpr references eachTom Lane2008-01-17
| | | | | | | | | | subquery output column exactly once left-to-right. Although this is the case in the original parser output, it might not be so after rewriting and constant-folding, as illustrated by bug #3882 from Jan Mate. Instead scan the subquery's target list to obtain needed per-column information; this is duplicative of what the parser did, but only a couple dozen lines need be copied, and we can clean up a couple of notational uglinesses. Bug was introduced in 8.2 as part of revision of SubLink representation.
* Fix logical errors in constraint exclusion: we cannot assume that a CHECKTom Lane2008-01-12
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | constraint yields TRUE for every row of its table, only that it does not yield FALSE (a NULL result isn't disallowed). This breaks a couple of implications that would be true in two-valued logic. I had put in one such mistake in an 8.2.5 patch: foo IS NULL doesn't refute a strict operator on foo. But there was another in the original 8.2 release: NOT foo doesn't refute an expression whose truth would imply the truth of foo. Per report from Rajesh Kumar Mallah. To preserve the ability to do constraint exclusion with one partition holding NULL values, extend relation_excluded_by_constraints() to check for attnotnull flags, and add col IS NOT NULL expressions to the set of constraints we hope to refute.
* Fix a conceptual error in my patch of 2007-10-26 that avoided consideringTom Lane2008-01-11
| | | | | | | | | | | | clauseless joins of relations that have unexploited join clauses. Rather than looking at every other base relation in the query, the correct thing is to examine the other relations in the "initial_rels" list of the current make_rel_from_joinlist() invocation, because those are what we actually have the ability to join against. This might be a subset of the whole query in cases where join_collapse_limit or from_collapse_limit or full joins have prevented merging the whole query into a single join problem. This is a bit untidy because we have to pass those rels down through a new PlannerInfo field, but it's necessary. Per bug #3865 from Oleg Kharin.
* Fix a bug in 8.2.x that was exposed while investigating Kevin Grittner'sTom Lane2008-01-09
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | report of poor planning in 8.3: it's unsafe to push a constant across an outer join when the outer-join condition is delayed by lower outer joins, unless we recheck the outer-join condition at the upper outer join. 8.2.x doesn't really have the ability to tell whether this is the case or not, but fortunately it doesn't matter --- it seems most desirable to keep the join condition whether it's entirely redundant or not. However, it's usually mostly redundant, so force its selectivity to 1.0. It might be a good idea to back-patch this into 8.1 as well, but I'll refrain until/unless there's evidence that 8.1 actually fails on any cases that this would fix.
* A long time ago, Peter pointed out that ruleutils.c didn't dump simpleTom Lane2008-01-06
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | constant ORDER/GROUP BY entries properly: http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2001-04/msg00457.php The original solution to that was in fact no good, as demonstrated by today's report from Martin Pitt: http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-bugs/2008-01/msg00027.php We can't use the column-number-reference format for a constant that is a resjunk targetlist entry, a case that was unfortunately not thought of in the original discussion. What we can do instead (which did not work at the time, but does work in 7.3 and up) is to emit the constant with explicit ::typename decoration, even if it otherwise wouldn't need it. This is sufficient to keep the parser from thinking it's a column number reference, and indeed is probably what the user must have done to get such a thing into the querytree in the first place.