aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/src
Commit message (Collapse)AuthorAge
...
* Fix off-by-one error in calculating subtrans/multixact truncation point.Heikki Linnakangas2015-07-23
| | | | | | | | | | If there were no subtransactions (or multixacts) active, we would calculate the oldestxid == next xid. That's correct, but if next XID happens to be on the next pg_subtrans (pg_multixact) page, the page does not exist yet, and SimpleLruTruncate will produce an "apparent wraparound" warning. The warning is harmless in this case, but looks very alarming to users. Backpatch to all supported versions. Patch and analysis by Thomas Munro.
* Fix add_rte_to_flat_rtable() for recent feature additions.Tom Lane2015-07-21
| | | | | | | | | | | The TABLESAMPLE and row security patches each overlooked this function, though their errors of omission were opposite: RLS failed to zero out the securityQuals field, leading to wasteful copying of useless expression trees in finished plans, while TABLESAMPLE neglected to add a comment saying that it intentionally *isn't* deleting the tablesample subtree. There probably should be a similar comment about ctename, too. Back-patch as appropriate.
* Fix (some of) pltcl memory usageAlvaro Herrera2015-07-20
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | As reported by Bill Parker, PL/Tcl did not validate some malloc() calls against NULL return. Fix by using palloc() in a new long-lived memory context instead. This allows us to simplify error handling too, by simply deleting the memory context instead of doing retail frees. There's still a lot that could be done to improve PL/Tcl's memory handling ... This is pretty ancient, so backpatch all the way back. Author: Michael Paquier and Álvaro Herrera Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAFrbyQwyLDYXfBOhPfoBGqnvuZO_Y90YgqFM11T2jvnxjLFmqw@mail.gmail.com
* Make WaitLatchOrSocket's timeout detection more robust.Tom Lane2015-07-18
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | In the previous coding, timeout would be noticed and reported only when poll() or socket() returned zero (or the equivalent behavior on Windows). Ordinarily that should work well enough, but it seems conceivable that we could get into a state where poll() always returns a nonzero value --- for example, if it is noticing a condition on one of the file descriptors that we do not think is reason to exit the loop. If that happened, we'd be in a busy-wait loop that would fail to terminate even when the timeout expires. We can make this more robust at essentially no cost, by deciding to exit of our own accord if we compute a zero or negative time-remaining-to-wait. Previously the code noted this but just clamped the time-remaining to zero, expecting that we'd detect timeout on the next loop iteration. Back-patch to 9.2. While 9.1 had a version of WaitLatchOrSocket, it was primitive compared to later versions, and did not guarantee reliable detection of timeouts anyway. (Essentially, this is a refinement of commit 3e7fdcffd6f77187, which was back-patched only as far as 9.2.)
* AIX: Test the -qlonglong option before use.Noah Misch2015-07-17
| | | | | | | | xlc provides "long long" unconditionally at C99-compatible language levels, and this option provokes a warning. The warning interferes with "configure" tests that fail in response to any warning. Notably, before commit 85a2a8903f7e9151793308d0638621003aded5ae, it interfered with the test for -qnoansialias. Back-patch to 9.0 (all supported versions).
* Fix a low-probability crash in our qsort implementation.Tom Lane2015-07-16
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | It's standard for quicksort implementations, after having partitioned the input into two subgroups, to recurse to process the smaller partition and then handle the larger partition by iterating. This method guarantees that no more than log2(N) levels of recursion can be needed. However, Bentley and McIlroy argued that checking to see which partition is smaller isn't worth the cycles, and so their code doesn't do that but just always recurses on the left partition. In most cases that's fine; but with worst-case input we might need O(N) levels of recursion, and that means that qsort could be driven to stack overflow. Such an overflow seems to be the only explanation for today's report from Yiqing Jin of a SIGSEGV in med3_tuple while creating an index of a couple billion entries with a very large maintenance_work_mem setting. Therefore, let's spend the few additional cycles and lines of code needed to choose the smaller partition for recursion. Also, fix up the qsort code so that it properly uses size_t not int for some intermediate values representing numbers of items. This would only be a live risk when sorting more than INT_MAX bytes (in qsort/qsort_arg) or tuples (in qsort_tuple), which I believe would never happen with any caller in the current core code --- but perhaps it could happen with call sites in third-party modules? In any case, this is trouble waiting to happen, and the corrected code is probably if anything shorter and faster than before, since it removes sign-extension steps that had to happen when converting between int and size_t. In passing, move a couple of CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() calls so that it's not necessary to preserve the value of "r" across them, and prettify the output of gen_qsort_tuple.pl a little. Back-patch to all supported branches. The odds of hitting this issue are probably higher in 9.4 and up than before, due to the new ability to allocate sort workspaces exceeding 1GB, but there's no good reason to believe that it's impossible to crash older branches this way.
* Fix spelling errorMagnus Hagander2015-07-16
| | | | David Rowley
* AIX: Link the postgres executable with -Wl,-brtllib.Noah Misch2015-07-15
| | | | | | | | | This allows PostgreSQL modules and their dependencies to have undefined symbols, resolved at runtime. Perl module shared objects rely on that in Perl 5.8.0 and later. This fixes the crash when PL/PerlU loads such modules, as the hstore_plperl test suite does. Module authors can link using -Wl,-G to permit undefined symbols; by default, linking will fail as it has. Back-patch to 9.0 (all supported versions).
* Fix assorted memory leaks.Tom Lane2015-07-12
| | | | | | | | Per Coverity (not that any of these are so non-obvious that they should not have been caught before commit). The extent of leakage is probably minor to unnoticeable, but a leak is a leak. Back-patch as necessary. Michael Paquier
* Fix postmaster's handling of a startup-process crash.Tom Lane2015-07-09
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Ordinarily, a failure (unexpected exit status) of the startup subprocess should be considered fatal, so the postmaster should just close up shop and quit. However, if we sent the startup process a SIGQUIT or SIGKILL signal, the failure is hardly "unexpected", and we should attempt restart; this is necessary for recovery from ordinary backend crashes in hot-standby scenarios. I attempted to implement the latter rule with a two-line patch in commit 442231d7f71764b8c628044e7ce2225f9aa43b67, but it now emerges that that patch was a few bricks shy of a load: it failed to distinguish the case of a signaled startup process from the case where the new startup process crashes before reaching database consistency. That resulted in infinitely respawning a new startup process only to have it crash again. To handle this properly, we really must track whether we have sent the *current* startup process a kill signal. Rather than add yet another ad-hoc boolean to the postmaster's state, I chose to unify this with the existing RecoveryError flag into an enum tracking the startup process's state. That seems more consistent with the postmaster's general state machine design. Back-patch to 9.0, like the previous patch.
* Fix null pointer dereference in "\c" psql command.Noah Misch2015-07-08
| | | | | | The psql crash happened when no current connection existed. (The second new check is optional given today's undocumented NULL argument handling in PQhost() etc.) Back-patch to 9.0 (all supported versions).
* Improve handling of out-of-memory in libpq.Heikki Linnakangas2015-07-07
| | | | | | | | | | | | If an allocation fails in the main message handling loop, pqParseInput3 or pqParseInput2, it should not be treated as "not enough data available yet". Otherwise libpq will wait indefinitely for more data to arrive from the server, and gets stuck forever. This isn't a complete fix - getParamDescriptions and getCopyStart still have the same issue, but it's a step in the right direction. Michael Paquier and me. Backpatch to all supported versions.
* Turn install.bat into a pure one line wrapper fort he perl script.Heikki Linnakangas2015-07-07
| | | | | | | | | | | | | Build.bat and vcregress.bat got similar treatment years ago. I'm not sure why install.bat wasn't treated at the same time, but it seems like a good idea anyway. The immediate problem with the old install.bat was that it had quoting issues, and wouldn't work if the target directory's name contained spaces. This fixes that problem. I committed this to master yesterday, this is a backpatch of the same for all supported versions.
* Fix logical decoding bug leading to inefficient reopening of files.Andres Freund2015-07-07
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | When spilling transaction data to disk a simple typo caused the output file to be closed and reopened for every serialized change. That happens to not have a huge impact on linux, which is why it probably wasn't noticed so far, but on windows that appears to trigger actual disk writes after every change. Not fun. The bug fortunately does not have any impact besides speed. A change could end up being in the wrong segment (last instead of next), but since we read all files to the end, that's just ugly, not really problematic. It's not a problem to upgrade, since transaction spill files do not persist across restarts. Bug: #13484 Reported-By: Olivier Gosseaume Discussion: 20150703090217.1190.63940@wrigleys.postgresql.org Backpatch to 9.4, where logical decoding was added.
* Fix pg_recvlogical not to fsync output when it's a tty or pipe.Andres Freund2015-07-07
| | | | | | | | | | | | The previous coding tried to handle possible failures when fsyncing a tty or pipe fd by accepting EINVAL - but apparently some platforms (windows, OSX) don't reliably return that. So instead check whether the output fd refers to a pipe or a tty when opening it. Reported-By: Olivier Gosseaume, Marko Tiikkaja Discussion: 559AF98B.3050901@joh.to Backpatch to 9.4, where pg_recvlogical was added.
* Fix some typos in regression test comments.Tom Lane2015-07-05
| | | | | | Back-patch to avoid unnecessary cross-branch differences. CharSyam
* Make numeric form of PG version number readily available in Makefiles.Tom Lane2015-07-05
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Expose PG_VERSION_NUM (e.g., "90600") as a Make variable; but for consistency with the other Make variables holding similar info, call the variable just VERSION_NUM not PG_VERSION_NUM. There was some discussion of making this value available as a pg_config value as well. However, that would entail substantially more work than this two-line patch. Given that there was not exactly universal consensus that we need this at all, let's just do a minimal amount of work for now. Back-patch of commit a5d489ccb7e613c7ca3be6141092b8c1d2c13fa7, so that this variable is actually useful for its intended purpose sometime before 2020. Michael Paquier, reviewed by Pavel Stehule
* PL/Perl: Add alternative expected file for Perl 5.22Peter Eisentraut2015-07-03
|
* Don't emit a spurious space at end of line in pg_dump of event triggers.Heikki Linnakangas2015-07-02
| | | | Backpatch to 9.3 and above, where event triggers were added.
* Don't call PageGetSpecialPointer() on page until it's been initialized.Heikki Linnakangas2015-06-30
| | | | | | | | | | After calling XLogInitBufferForRedo(), the page might be all-zeros if it was not in page cache already. btree_xlog_unlink_page initialized the page correctly, but it called PageGetSpecialPointer before initializing it, which would lead to a corrupt page at WAL replay, if the unlinked page is not in page cache. Backpatch to 9.4, the bug came with the rewrite of B-tree page deletion.
* Back-patch some minor bug fixes in GUC code.Tom Lane2015-06-28
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | In 9.4, fix a 9.4.1 regression that allowed multiple entries for a PGC_POSTMASTER variable to cause bogus complaints in the postmaster log. (The issue here was that commit bf007a27acd7b2fb unintentionally reverted 3e3f65973a3c94a6, which suppressed any duplicate entries within ParseConfigFp. Back-patch the reimplementation just made in HEAD, which makes use of an "ignore" field to prevent application of superseded items.) Add missed failure check in AlterSystemSetConfigFile(). We don't really expect ParseConfigFp() to fail, but that's not an excuse for not checking. In both 9.3 and 9.4, remove mistaken assignment to ConfigFileLineno that caused line counting after an include_dir directive to be completely wrong.
* Fix comment for GetCurrentIntegerTimestamp().Kevin Grittner2015-06-28
| | | | | | The unit of measure is microseconds, not milliseconds. Backpatch to 9.3 where the function and its comment were added.
* Add opaque declaration of HTAB to tqual.h.Kevin Grittner2015-06-27
| | | | | | | | | | | | | Commit b89e151054a05f0f6d356ca52e3b725dd0505e53 added the ResolveCminCmaxDuringDecoding declaration to tqual.h, which uses an HTAB parameter, without declaring HTAB. It accidentally fails to fail to build with current sources because a declaration happens to be included, directly or indirectly, in all source files that currently use tqual.h before tqual.h is first included, but we shouldn't count on that. Since an opaque declaration is enough here, just use that, as was done in snapmgr.h. Backpatch to 9.4, where the HTAB reference was added to tqual.h.
* Revoke incorrectly applied patch versionSimon Riggs2015-06-27
|
* Avoid hot standby cancels from VAC FREEZESimon Riggs2015-06-27
| | | | | | | | | | | | VACUUM FREEZE generated false cancelations of standby queries on an otherwise idle master. Caused by an off-by-one error on cutoff_xid which goes back to original commit. Backpatch to all versions 9.0+ Analysis and report by Marco Nenciarini Bug fix by Simon Riggs
* Fix a couple of bugs with wal_log_hints.Heikki Linnakangas2015-06-26
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | 1. Replay of the WAL record for setting a bit in the visibility map contained an assertion that a full-page image of that record type can only occur with checksums enabled. But it can also happen with wal_log_hints, so remove the assertion. Unlike checksums, wal_log_hints can be changed on the fly, so it would be complicated to figure out if it was enabled at the time that the WAL record was generated. 2. wal_log_hints has the same effect on the locking needed to read the LSN of a page as data checksums. BufferGetLSNAtomic() didn't get the memo. Backpatch to 9.4, where wal_log_hints was added.
* Allow background workers to connect to no particular database.Robert Haas2015-06-25
| | | | | | | The documentation claims that this is supported, but it didn't actually work. Fix that. Reported by Pavel Stehule; patch by me.
* Fix the logic for putting relations into the relcache init file.Tom Lane2015-06-25
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Commit f3b5565dd4e59576be4c772da364704863e6a835 was a couple of bricks shy of a load; specifically, it missed putting pg_trigger_tgrelid_tgname_index into the relcache init file, because that index is not used by any syscache. However, we have historically nailed that index into cache for performance reasons. The upshot was that load_relcache_init_file always decided that the init file was busted and silently ignored it, resulting in a significant hit to backend startup speed. To fix, reinstantiate RelationIdIsInInitFile() as a wrapper around RelationSupportsSysCache(), which can know about additional relations that should be in the init file despite being unknown to syscache.c. Also install some guards against future mistakes of this type: make write_relcache_init_file Assert that all nailed relations get written to the init file, and make load_relcache_init_file emit a WARNING if it takes the "wrong number of nailed relations" exit path. Now that we remove the init files during postmaster startup, that case should never occur in the field, even if we are starting a minor-version update that added or removed rels from the nailed set. So the warning shouldn't ever be seen by end users, but it will show up in the regression tests if somebody breaks this logic. Back-patch to all supported branches, like the previous commit.
* Improve inheritance_planner()'s performance for large inheritance sets.Tom Lane2015-06-22
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Commit c03ad5602f529787968fa3201b35c119bbc6d782 introduced a planner performance regression for UPDATE/DELETE on large inheritance sets. It required copying the append_rel_list (which is of size proportional to the number of inherited tables) once for each inherited table, thus resulting in O(N^2) time and memory consumption. While it's difficult to avoid that in general, the extra work only has to be done for append_rel_list entries that actually reference subquery RTEs, which inheritance-set entries will not. So we can buy back essentially all of the loss in cases without subqueries in FROM; and even for those, the added work is mainly proportional to the number of UNION ALL subqueries. Back-patch to 9.2, like the previous commit. Tom Lane and Dean Rasheed, per a complaint from Thomas Munro.
* Truncate strings in tarCreateHeader() with strlcpy(), not sprintf().Noah Misch2015-06-21
| | | | | | | | | | This supplements the GNU libc bug #6530 workarounds introduced in commit 54cd4f04576833abc394e131288bf3dd7dcf4806. On affected systems, a tar-format pg_basebackup failed when some filename beneath the data directory was not valid character data in the postmaster/walsender locale. Back-patch to 9.1, where pg_basebackup was introduced. Extant, bug-prone conversion specifications receive only ASCII bytes or involve low-importance messages.
* Improve multixact emergency autovacuum logic.Andres Freund2015-06-21
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Previously autovacuum was not necessarily triggered if space in the members slru got tight. The first problem was that the signalling was tied to values in the offsets slru, but members can advance much faster. Thats especially a problem if old sessions had been around that previously prevented the multixact horizon to increase. Secondly the skipping logic doesn't work if the database was restarted after autovacuum was triggered - that knowledge is not preserved across restart. This is especially a problem because it's a common panic-reaction to restart the database if it gets slow to anti-wraparound vacuums. Fix the first problem by separating the logic for members from offsets. Trigger autovacuum whenever a multixact crosses a segment boundary, as the current member offset increases in irregular values, so we can't use a simple modulo logic as for offsets. Add a stopgap for the second problem, by signalling autovacuum whenver ERRORing out because of boundaries. Discussion: 20150608163707.GD20772@alap3.anarazel.de Backpatch into 9.3, where it became more likely that multixacts wrap around.
* Add missing check for wal_debug GUC.Andres Freund2015-06-21
| | | | | | | | | | 9a20a9b2 added a new elog(), enabled when WAL_DEBUG is defined. The other WAL_DEBUG dependant messages check for the wal_debug GUC, but this one did not. While at it replace 'upto' with 'up to'. Discussion: 20150610110253.GF3832@alap3.anarazel.de Backpatch to 9.4, the first release containing 9a20a9b2.
* Fix failure to copy setlocale() return value.Noah Misch2015-06-20
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | POSIX permits setlocale() calls to invalidate any previous setlocale() return values, but commit 5f538ad004aa00cf0881f179f0cde789aad4f47e neglected to account for setlocale(LC_CTYPE, NULL) doing so. The effect was to set the LC_CTYPE environment variable to an unintended value. pg_perm_setlocale() sets this variable to assist PL/Perl; without it, Perl would undo PostgreSQL's locale settings. The known-affected configurations are 32-bit, release builds using Visual Studio 2012 or Visual Studio 2013. Visual Studio 2010 is unaffected, as were all buildfarm-attested configurations. In principle, this bug could leave the wrong LC_CTYPE in effect after PL/Perl use, which could in turn facilitate problems like corrupt tsvector datums. No known platform experiences that consequence, because PL/Perl on Windows does not use this environment variable. The bug has been user-visible, as early postmaster failure, on systems with Windows ANSI code page set to CP936 for "Chinese (Simplified, PRC)" and probably on systems using other multibyte code pages. (SetEnvironmentVariable() rejects values containing character data not valid under the Windows ANSI code page.) Back-patch to 9.4, where the faulty commit first appeared. Reported by Didi Hu and 林鹏程. Reviewed by Tom Lane, though this fix strategy was not his first choice.
* Fix thinko in comment (launcher -> worker)Alvaro Herrera2015-06-20
|
* In immediate shutdown, postmaster should not exit till children are gone.Tom Lane2015-06-19
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This adjusts commit 82233ce7ea42d6ba519aaec63008aff49da6c7af so that the postmaster does not exit until all its child processes have exited, even if the 5-second timeout elapses and we have to send SIGKILL. There is no great value in having the postmaster process quit sooner, and doing so can mislead onlookers into thinking that the cluster is fully terminated when actually some child processes still survive. This effect might explain recent test failures on buildfarm member hamster, wherein we failed to restart a cluster just after shutting it down with "pg_ctl stop -m immediate". I also did a bit of code review/beautification, including fixing a faulty use of the Max() macro on a volatile expression. Back-patch to 9.4. In older branches, the postmaster never waited for children to exit during immediate shutdowns, and changing that would be too much of a behavioral change.
* Clamp autovacuum launcher sleep time to 5 minutesAlvaro Herrera2015-06-19
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This avoids the problem that it might go to sleep for an unreasonable amount of time in unusual conditions like the server clock moving backwards an unreasonable amount of time. (Simply moving the server clock forward again doesn't solve the problem unless you wake up the autovacuum launcher manually, say by sending it SIGHUP). Per trouble report from Prakash Itnal in https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAHC5u79-UqbapAABH2t4Rh2eYdyge0Zid-X=Xz-ZWZCBK42S0Q@mail.gmail.com Analyzed independently by Haribabu Kommi and Tom Lane.
* Fix corner case in autovacuum-forcing logic for multixact wraparound.Robert Haas2015-06-19
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Since find_multixact_start() relies on SimpleLruDoesPhysicalPageExist(), and that function looks only at the on-disk state, it's possible for it to fail to find a page that exists in the in-memory SLRU that has not been written yet. If that happens, SetOffsetVacuumLimit() will erroneously decide to force emergency autovacuuming immediately. We should probably fix find_multixact_start() to consider the data cached in memory as well as on the on-disk state, but that's no excuse for SetOffsetVacuumLimit() to be stupid about the case where it can no longer read the value after having previously succeeded in doing so. Report by Andres Freund.
* Check for out of memory when allocating sqlca.Michael Meskes2015-06-15
| | | | Patch by Michael Paquier
* Fix memory leak in ecpglib's connect function.Michael Meskes2015-06-15
| | | | Patch by Michael Paquier
* Fix intoasc() in Informix compat lib. This function used to be a noop.Michael Meskes2015-06-13
| | | | Patch by Michael Paquier
* Fixed some memory leaks in ECPG.Michael Meskes2015-06-13
| | | | Patch by Michael Paquier
* Improve error message and hint for ALTER COLUMN TYPE can't-cast failure.Tom Lane2015-06-12
| | | | | | | | | | We already tried to improve this once, but the "improved" text was rather off-target if you had provided a USING clause. Also, it seems helpful to provide the exact text of a suggested USING clause, so users can just copy-and-paste it when needed. Per complaint from Keith Rarick and a suggestion from Merlin Moncure. Back-patch to 9.2 where the current wording was adopted.
* Fix typo in comment.Kevin Grittner2015-06-10
| | | | Backpatch to 9.4 to minimize possible conflicts.
* Stamp 9.4.4.REL9_4_4Tom Lane2015-06-09
|
* Report more information if pg_perm_setlocale() fails at startup.Tom Lane2015-06-09
| | | | | | We don't know why a few Windows users have seen this fail, but the taciturnity of the error message certainly isn't helping debug it. Let's at least find out which LC category isn't working.
* Allow HotStandbyActiveInReplay() to be called in single user mode.Andres Freund2015-06-08
| | | | | | | | | | | | HotStandbyActiveInReplay, introduced in 061b079f, only allowed WAL replay to happen in the startup process, missing the single user case. This buglet is fairly harmless as it only causes problems when single user mode in an assertion enabled build is used to replay a btree vacuum record. Backpatch to 9.2. 061b079f was backpatched further, but the assertion was not.
* Use a safer method for determining whether relcache init file is stale.Tom Lane2015-06-07
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | When we invalidate the relcache entry for a system catalog or index, we must also delete the relcache "init file" if the init file contains a copy of that rel's entry. The old way of doing this relied on a specially maintained list of the OIDs of relations present in the init file: we made the list either when reading the file in, or when writing the file out. The problem is that when writing the file out, we included only rels present in our local relcache, which might have already suffered some deletions due to relcache inval events. In such cases we correctly decided not to overwrite the real init file with incomplete data --- but we still used the incomplete initFileRelationIds list for the rest of the current session. This could result in wrong decisions about whether the session's own actions require deletion of the init file, potentially allowing an init file created by some other concurrent session to be left around even though it's been made stale. Since we don't support changing the schema of a system catalog at runtime, the only likely scenario in which this would cause a problem in the field involves a "vacuum full" on a catalog concurrently with other activity, and even then it's far from easy to provoke. Remarkably, this has been broken since 2002 (in commit 786340441706ac1957a031f11ad1c2e5b6e18314), but we had never seen a reproducible test case until recently. If it did happen in the field, the symptoms would probably involve unexpected "cache lookup failed" errors to begin with, then "could not open file" failures after the next checkpoint, as all accesses to the affected catalog stopped working. Recovery would require manually removing the stale "pg_internal.init" file. To fix, get rid of the initFileRelationIds list, and instead consult syscache.c's list of relations used in catalog caches to decide whether a relation is included in the init file. This should be a tad more efficient anyway, since we're replacing linear search of a list with ~100 entries with a binary search. It's a bit ugly that the init file contents are now so directly tied to the catalog caches, but in practice that won't make much difference. Back-patch to all supported branches.
* Fix incorrect order of database-locking operations in InitPostgres().Tom Lane2015-06-05
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | We should set MyProc->databaseId after acquiring the per-database lock, not beforehand. The old way risked deadlock against processes trying to copy or delete the target database, since they would first acquire the lock and then wait for processes with matching databaseId to exit; that left a window wherein an incoming process could set its databaseId and then block on the lock, while the other process had the lock and waited in vain for the incoming process to exit. CountOtherDBBackends() would time out and fail after 5 seconds, so this just resulted in an unexpected failure not a permanent lockup, but it's still annoying when it happens. A real-world example of a use-case is that short-duration connections to a template database should not cause CREATE DATABASE to fail. Doing it in the other order should be fine since the contract has always been that processes searching the ProcArray for a database ID must hold the relevant per-database lock while searching. Thus, this actually removes the former race condition that required an assumption that storing to MyProc->databaseId is atomic. It's been like this for a long time, so back-patch to all active branches.
* Cope with possible failure of the oldest MultiXact to exist.Robert Haas2015-06-05
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Recent commits, mainly b69bf30b9bfacafc733a9ba77c9587cf54d06c0c and 53bb309d2d5a9432d2602c93ed18e58bd2924e15, introduced mechanisms to protect against wraparound of the MultiXact member space: the number of multixacts that can exist at one time is limited to 2^32, but the total number of members in those multixacts is also limited to 2^32, and older code did not take care to enforce the second limit, potentially allowing old data to be overwritten while it was still needed. Unfortunately, these new mechanisms failed to account for the fact that the code paths in which they run might be executed during recovery or while the cluster was in an inconsistent state. Also, they failed to account for the fact that users who used pg_upgrade to upgrade a PostgreSQL version between 9.3.0 and 9.3.4 might have might oldestMultiXid = 1 in the control file despite the true value being larger. To fix these problems, first, avoid unnecessarily examining the mmembers of MultiXacts when the cluster is not known to be consistent. TruncateMultiXact has done this for a long time, and this patch does not fix that. But the new calls used to prevent member wraparound are not needed until we reach normal running, so avoid calling them earlier. (SetMultiXactIdLimit is actually called before InRecovery is set, so we can't rely on that; we invent our own multixact-specific flag instead.) Second, make failure to look up the members of a MultiXact a non-fatal error. Instead, if we're unable to determine the member offset at which wraparound would occur, postpone arming the member wraparound defenses until we are able to do so. If we're unable to determine the member offset that should force autovacuum, force it continuously until we are able to do so. If we're unable to deterine the member offset at which we should truncate the members SLRU, log a message and skip truncation. An important consequence of these changes is that anyone who does have a bogus oldestMultiXid = 1 value in pg_control will experience immediate emergency autovacuuming when upgrading to a release that contains this fix. The release notes should highlight this fact. If a user has no pg_multixact/offsets/0000 file, but has oldestMultiXid = 1 in the control file, they may wish to vacuum any tables with relminmxid = 1 prior to upgrading in order to avoid an immediate emergency autovacuum after the upgrade. This must be done with a PostgreSQL version 9.3.5 or newer and with vacuum_multixact_freeze_min_age and vacuum_multixact_freeze_table_age set to 0. This patch also adds an additional log message at each database server startup, indicating either that protections against member wraparound have been engaged, or that they have not. In the latter case, once autovacuum has advanced oldestMultiXid to a sane value, the message indicating that the guards have been engaged will appear at the next checkpoint. A few additional messages have also been added at the DEBUG1 level so that the correct operation of this code can be properly audited. Along the way, this patch fixes another, related bug in TruncateMultiXact that has existed since PostgreSQL 9.3.0: when no MultiXacts exist at all, the truncation code looks up NextMultiXactId, which doesn't exist yet. This can lead to TruncateMultiXact removing every file in pg_multixact/offsets instead of keeping one around, as it should. This in turn will cause the database server to refuse to start afterwards. Patch by me. Review by Álvaro Herrera, Andres Freund, Noah Misch, and Thomas Munro.
* pgindent run on access/transam/multixact.cAlvaro Herrera2015-06-04
| | | | | | | | | This file has been patched over and over, and the differences to master caused by pgindent are annoying enough that it seems saner to make the older branches look the same. Backpatch to 9.3, which is as far back as backpatching of bugfixes is necessary.