| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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Otherwise, the script output has a lot of pointless warnings.
This was forgotten in 9def031bd2821f35b5f506260d922482648a8bb0
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Previously, requesting commit timestamp for transactions
FrozenTransactionId and BootstrapTransactionId resulted in an error.
But since those values can validly appear in committed tuples' Xmin,
this behavior is unhelpful and error prone: each caller would have to
special-case those values before requesting timestamp data for an Xid.
We already have a perfectly good interface for returning "the Xid you
requested is too old for us to have commit TS data for it", so let's use
that instead.
Backpatch to 9.5, where commit timestamps appeared.
Author: Craig Ringer
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAMsr+YFM5Q=+ry3mKvWEqRTxrB0iU3qUSRnS28nz6FJYtBwhJg@mail.gmail.com
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An oversight in setting the boundaries of known commit timestamps during
startup caused old commit timestamps to become inaccessible after a
server restart.
Author and reporter: Julien Rouhaud
Review, test code: Craig Ringer
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This makes the psql() method much more capable: it captures both stdout
and stderr; it now returns the psql exit code rather than stdout; a
timeout can now be specified, as can ON_ERROR_STOP behavior; it gained a
new "on_error_die" (defaulting to off) parameter to raise an exception
if there's any problem. Finally, additional parameters to psql can be
passed if there's need for further tweaking.
For convenience, a new safe_psql() method retains much of the old
behavior of psql(), except that it uses on_error_die on, so that
problems like syntax errors in SQL commands can be detected more easily.
Many existing TAP test files now use safe_psql, which is what is really
wanted. A couple of ->psql() calls are now added in the commit_ts
tests, which verify that the right thing is happening on certain errors.
Some ->command_fails() calls in recovery tests that were verifying that
psql failed also became ->psql() calls now.
Author: Craig Ringer. Some tweaks by Álvaro Herrera
Reviewed-By: Michaël Paquier
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These tests verify that 1) WAL replay preserves the stored value,
2) a streaming standby server replays the value obtained from the
master, and 3) the behavior is sensible in the face of repeated
configuration changes.
One annoyance is that tmp_check/ subdir from the TAP tests is clobbered
when the pg_regress test runs in the same subdirectory. This is
bothersome but not too terrible a problem, since the pg_regress test is
not run anyway if the TAP tests fail (unless "make -k" is used).
I had these tests around since commit 69e7235c93e2; add them now that we
have the recovery test framework in place.
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