| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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might lead to a previously installed libpq being used instead. But we
don't actually have to link with libpq here at all, so remove it.
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other test code.
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function is_log_level_output(), for code clarity.
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function xmlagg.
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for its header comment.
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"input" and "output" dirs be necessarily present.
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with new GUC parameter "xmlbinary" that controls the output encoding, as
per SQL/XML standard.
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the generated files, to help Visual C++ to run these tests. The tests still
pass in VPATH and normal builds.
Patch from Magnus Hagander, editorialized by me.
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declarations are ignored and removed, in binary mode they are honored as
specified by the XML standard.
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for aggregates. This is OK for current uses but could burn somebody
someday...
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pending fsyncs during DROP DATABASE. Obviously necessary in hindsight :-(
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dependency on the platform's floating point implementation. Per
report from Stefan Kaltenbrunner.
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is deleted. A backend about to unlink a file now sends a "revoke fsync"
request to the bgwriter to make it clean out pending fsync requests. There
is still a race condition where the bgwriter may try to fsync after the unlink
has happened, but we can resolve that by rechecking the fsync request queue
to see if a revoke request arrived meanwhile. This eliminates the former
kluge of "just assuming" that an ENOENT failure is okay, and lets us handle
the fact that on Windows it might be EACCES too without introducing any
questionable assumptions. After an idea of mine improved by Magnus.
The HEAD patch doesn't apply cleanly to 8.2, but I'll see about a back-port
later. In the meantime this could do with some testing on Windows; I've been
able to force it through the code path via ENOENT, but that doesn't prove that
it actually fixes the Windows problem ...
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* After Markos patch, now builds pgcrypto without zlib again
* Updates README with xml info
* xml requires xslt and iconv
* disable unnecessary warning about __cdecl()
* Add a buildenv.bat called from all other bat files to set up things
like PATH for flex/bison. (Can't just set it before calling, doesn't
always work when building from the GUI)
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The implementation is somewhat ugly logic-wise, but I don't see an
easy way to make it more concise.
When writing this, I noticed that my previous implementation of
width_bucket() doesn't handle NaN correctly:
postgres=# select width_bucket('NaN', 1, 5, 5);
width_bucket
--------------
6
(1 row)
AFAICS SQL:2003 does not define a NaN value, so it doesn't address how
width_bucket() should behave here. The patch changes width_bucket() so
that ereport(ERROR) is raised if NaN is specified for the operand or the
lower or upper bounds to width_bucket(). For float8, NaN is disallowed
for any of the floating-point inputs, and +/- infinity is disallowed
for the histogram bounds (but allowed for the operand).
Update docs and regression tests, bump the catversion.
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it was checking a pg_constraint OID instead of pg_class OID, resulting in
"relation with OID nnnnn does not exist" failures for anyone who wasn't
owner of the table being examined. Per bug #2848 from Laurence Rowe.
Note: for existing 8.2 installations a simple version update won't fix this;
the easiest fix is to CREATE OR REPLACE this view with the corrected
definition.
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accessing it, like DROP DATABASE. This allows the regression tests to pass
with autovacuum enabled, which open the gates for finally enabling autovacuum
by default.
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standard convention the 21st century runs from 2001-2100, not 2000-2099,
so make it work like that. Per bug #2885 from Akio Iwaasa.
Backpatch to 8.2, but no further, since this is really a definitional
change; users of older branches are probably more interested in stability.
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hold true for operators in a btree operator family. This is mostly to
clarify my own thinking about what the planner can assume for optimization
purposes. (blowing dust off an old abstract-algebra textbook...)
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coercion to type xml was a mistake. Escape values so they are valid
XML character data.
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create expected file with correct port number
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Added patch by Joachim to work around OpenBSD bug in regression suite.
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(or other types of pg_class entry): the function pgstat_vacuum_tabstat,
invoked during VACUUM startup, had runtime proportional to the number of
stats table entries times the number of pg_class rows; in other words
O(N^2) if the stats collector's information is reasonably complete.
Replace list searching with a hash table to bring it back to O(N)
behavior. Per report from kim at myemma.com.
Back-patch as far as 8.1; 8.0 and before use different coding here.
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expressions/functions.
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ORDER BY.
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So far only tested by hacking the planner ...
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Made this option mark the .c files, so the environment variable is no longer needed.
Created a special MinGW file with the special error message.
Do not print port into log file when running regression tests.
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Backpatch to 8.2.X.
L Bayuk
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L Bayuk
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our own printing dance. This does a better job of quoting and escaping the
values.
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per Stefan Kaltenbrunner.
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which comparison operators to use for plan nodes involving tuple comparison
(Agg, Group, Unique, SetOp). Formerly the executor looked up the default
equality operator for the datatype, which was really pretty shaky, since it's
possible that the data being fed to the node is sorted according to some
nondefault operator class that could have an incompatible idea of equality.
The planner knows what it has sorted by and therefore can provide the right
equality operator to use. Also, this change moves a couple of catalog lookups
out of the executor and into the planner, which should help startup time for
pre-planned queries by some small amount. Modify the planner to remove some
other cavalier assumptions about always being able to use the default
operators. Also add "nulls first/last" info to the Plan node for a mergejoin
--- neither the executor nor the planner can cope yet, but at least the API is
in place.
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1) gendef works from inside visual studio - use a tempfile instead of
redirection, because for some reason you can't redirect dumpbin from
inside (patch from Joachim Wieland)
2) gendef must process only *.obj, or you get weird errors in some build
scenarios when it tries to process a logfile
Magnus Hagander
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the same output level that was used when building a single project
before, and really needed to get reasonable information about what
happens (non-verbose just says "starting build of foo" and "done
building foo", more or less).
Magnus Hagander
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research.
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nattr field, and rename the field.
Heikki Linnakangas
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Bill Moran
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management. The paper clearly describes many of the ideas embodied in
our current hashing code, but as far as I could find out there is not
a direct code heritage. (Mike Olsen recalls discussion of this paper
at Postgres meetings but believes it "informed the Postgres implementation
probably just at the design level". Margo herself says she wasn't
involved with Postgres' hash code.) Credit where credit is due 'n all
that, even if fifteen years after the fact.
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