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* Fix misplaced right paren bugs in pgstatfuncs.c.Kevin Grittner2013-12-27
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | The bug would only show up if the C sockaddr structure contained zero in the first byte for a valid address; otherwise it would fail to fail, which is probably why it went unnoticed for so long. Patch submitted by Joel Jacobson after seeing an article by Andrey Karpov in which he reports finding this through static code analysis using PVS-Studio. While I was at it I moved a definition of a local variable referenced in the buggy code to a more local context. Backpatch to all supported branches.
* Fix ANALYZE failure on a column that's a domain over a range.Tom Lane2013-12-23
| | | | | | Most other range operations seem to work all right on domains, but this one not so much, at least not since commit 918eee0c. Per bug #8684 from Brett Neumeier.
* Avoid useless palloc during transaction commitAlvaro Herrera2013-12-20
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | We can allocate the initial relations-to-drop array when first needed, instead of at function entry; this avoids allocating it when the function is not going to do anything, which is most of the time. Backpatch to 9.3, where this behavior was introduced by commit 279628a0a7cf5. There's more that could be done here, such as possible reworking of the code to avoid having to palloc anything, but that doesn't sound as backpatchable as this relatively minor change. Per complaint from Noah Misch in 20131031145234.GA621493@tornado.leadboat.com
* Optimize updating a row that's locked by same xidAlvaro Herrera2013-12-19
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Updating or locking a row that was already locked by the same transaction under the same Xid caused a MultiXact to be created; but this is unnecessary, because there's no usefulness in being able to differentiate two locks by the same transaction. In particular, if a transaction executed SELECT FOR UPDATE followed by an UPDATE that didn't modify columns of the key, we would dutifully represent the resulting combination as a multixact -- even though a single key-update is sufficient. Optimize the case so that only the strongest of both locks/updates is represented in Xmax. This can save some Xmax's from becoming MultiXacts, which can be a significant optimization. This missed optimization opportunity was spotted by Andres Freund while investigating a bug reported by Oliver Seemann in message CANCipfpfzoYnOz5jj=UZ70_R=CwDHv36dqWSpwsi27vpm1z5sA@mail.gmail.com and also directly as a performance regression reported by Dong Ye in message d54b8387.000012d8.00000010@YED-DEVD1.vmware.com Reportedly, this patch fixes the performance regression. Since the missing optimization was reported as a significant performance regression from 9.2, backpatch to 9.3. Andres Freund, tweaked by Álvaro Herrera
* Don't ignore tuple locks propagated by our updatesAlvaro Herrera2013-12-18
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | If a tuple was locked by transaction A, and transaction B updated it, the new version of the tuple created by B would be locked by A, yet visible only to B; due to an oversight in HeapTupleSatisfiesUpdate, the lock held by A wouldn't get checked if transaction B later deleted (or key-updated) the new version of the tuple. This might cause referential integrity checks to give false positives (that is, allow deletes that should have been rejected). This is an easy oversight to have made, because prior to improved tuple locks in commit 0ac5ad5134f it wasn't possible to have tuples created by our own transaction that were also locked by remote transactions, and so locks weren't even considered in that code path. It is recommended that foreign keys be rechecked manually in bulk after installing this update, in case some referenced rows are missing with some referencing row remaining. Per bug reported by Daniel Wood in CAPweHKe5QQ1747X2c0tA=5zf4YnS2xcvGf13Opd-1Mq24rF1cQ@mail.gmail.com
* Rework tuple freezing protocolAlvaro Herrera2013-12-16
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Tuple freezing was broken in connection to MultiXactIds; commit 8e53ae025de9 tried to fix it, but didn't go far enough. As noted by Noah Misch, freezing a tuple whose Xmax is a multi containing an aborted update might cause locks in the multi to go ignored by later transactions. This is because the code depended on a multixact above their cutoff point not having any lock-only member older than the cutoff point for Xids, which is easily defeated in READ COMMITTED transactions. The fix for this involves creating a new MultiXactId when necessary. But this cannot be done during WAL replay, and moreover multixact examination requires using CLOG access routines which are not supposed to be used during WAL replay either; so tuple freezing cannot be done with the old freeze WAL record. Therefore, separate the freezing computation from its execution, and change the WAL record to carry all necessary information. At WAL replay time, it's easy to re-execute freezing because we don't need to re-compute the new infomask/Xmax values but just take them from the WAL record. While at it, restructure the coding to ensure all page changes occur in a single critical section without much room for failures. The previous coding wasn't using a critical section, without any explanation as to why this was acceptable. In replication scenarios using the 9.3 branch, standby servers must be upgraded before their master, so that they are prepared to deal with the new WAL record once the master is upgraded; failure to do so will cause WAL replay to die with a PANIC message. Later upgrade of the standby will allow the process to continue where it left off, so there's no disruption of the data in the standby in any case. Standbys know how to deal with the old WAL record, so it's okay to keep the master running the old code for a while. In master, the old freeze WAL record is gone, for cleanliness' sake; there's no compatibility concern there. Backpatch to 9.3, where the original bug was introduced and where the previous fix was backpatched. Álvaro Herrera and Andres Freund
* Add "SHIFT_JIS" as an accepted encoding name for locale checking.Tatsuo Ishii2013-12-15
| | | | | | | | | When locale is "ja_JP.SJIS", nl_langinfo(CODESET) returns "SHIFT_JIS" on some platforms, at least on RedHat Linux. So the encoding/locale match table (encoding_match_list) needs the entry. Otherwise client encoding is set to SQL_ASCII. Back patch to all supported branches.
* Fix inherited UPDATE/DELETE with UNION ALL subqueries.Tom Lane2013-12-14
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Fix an oversight in commit b3aaf9081a1a95c245fd605dcf02c91b3a5c3a29: we do indeed need to process the planner's append_rel_list when copying RTE subqueries, because if any of them were flattenable UNION ALL subqueries, the append_rel_list shows which subquery RTEs were pulled up out of which other ones. Without this, UNION ALL subqueries aren't correctly inserted into the update plans for inheritance child tables after the first one, typically resulting in no update happening for those child table(s). Per report from Victor Yegorov. Experimentation with this case also exposed a fault in commit a7b965382cf0cb30aeacb112572718045e6d4be7: if an inherited UPDATE/DELETE was proven totally dummy by constraint exclusion, we might arrive at add_rtes_to_flat_rtable with root->simple_rel_array being NULL. This should be interpreted as not having any RelOptInfos. I chose to code the guard as a check against simple_rel_array_size, so as to also provide some protection against indexing off the end of the array. Back-patch to 9.2 where the faulty code was added.
* Fix typoAlvaro Herrera2013-12-13
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* Rework MultiXactId cache codeAlvaro Herrera2013-12-13
| | | | | | | | | | | The original performs too poorly; in some scenarios it shows way too high while profiling. Try to make it a bit smarter to avoid excessive cosst. In particular, make it have a maximum size, and have entries be sorted in LRU order; once the max size is reached, evict the oldest entry to avoid it from growing too large. Per complaint from Andres Freund in connection with new tuple freezing code.
* Add HOLD/RESUME_INTERRUPTS in HandleCatchupInterrupt/HandleNotifyInterrupt.Tom Lane2013-12-13
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This prevents a possible longjmp out of the signal handler if a timeout or SIGINT occurs while something within the handler has transiently set ImmediateInterruptOK. For safety we must hold off the timeout or cancel error until we're back in mainline, or at least till we reach the end of the signal handler when ImmediateInterruptOK was true at entry. This syncs these functions with the logic now present in handle_sig_alarm. AFAICT there is no live bug here in 9.0 and up, because I don't think we currently can wait for any heavyweight lock inside these functions, and there is no other code (except read-from-client) that will turn on ImmediateInterruptOK. However, that was not true pre-9.0: in older branches ProcessIncomingNotify might block trying to lock pg_listener, and then a SIGINT could lead to undesirable control flow. It might be all right anyway given the relatively narrow code ranges in which NOTIFY interrupts are enabled, but for safety's sake I'm back-patching this.
* Don't let timeout interrupts happen unless ImmediateInterruptOK is set.Tom Lane2013-12-13
| | | | | | | | | | | | | Serious oversight in commit 16e1b7a1b7f7ffd8a18713e83c8cd72c9ce48e07: we should not allow an interrupt to take control away from mainline code except when ImmediateInterruptOK is set. Just to be safe, let's adopt the same save-clear-restore dance that's been used for many years in HandleCatchupInterrupt and HandleNotifyInterrupt, so that nothing bad happens if a timeout handler invokes code that tests or even manipulates ImmediateInterruptOK. Per report of "stuck spinlock" failures from Christophe Pettus, though many other symptoms are possible. Diagnosis by Andres Freund.
* Fix WAL-logging of setting the visibility map bit.Heikki Linnakangas2013-12-13
| | | | | | | | | The operation that removes the remaining dead tuples from the page must be WAL-logged before the setting of the VM bit. Otherwise, if you replay the WAL to between those two records, you end up with the VM bit set, but the dead tuples are still there. Backpatch to 9.3, where this bug was introduced.
* Fix ancient docs/comments thinko: XID comparison is mod 2^32, not 2^31.Tom Lane2013-12-12
| | | | Pointed out by Gianni Ciolli.
* Tweak placement of explicit ANALYZE commands in the regression tests.Tom Lane2013-12-11
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Make the COPY test, which loads most of the large static tables used in the tests, also explicitly ANALYZE those tables. This allows us to get rid of various ad-hoc, and rather redundant, ANALYZE commands that had gotten stuck into various test scripts over time to ensure we got consistent plan choices. (We could have done a database-wide ANALYZE, but that would cause stats to get attached to the small static tables too, which results in plan changes compared to the historical behavior. I'm not sure that's a good idea, so not going that far for now.) Back-patch to 9.0, since 9.0 and 9.1 are currently sometimes failing regression tests for lack of an "ANALYZE tenk1" in the subselect test. There's no need for this in 8.4 since we didn't print any plans back then.
* Add table name to VACUUM statement in matview.c.Kevin Grittner2013-12-11
| | | | | | | | The test only needs the one table to be vacuumed. Vacuuming the database may affect other tests. Per gripe from Tom Lane. Back-patch to 9.3, where the test was was added.
* Fix possible crash with nested SubLinks.Tom Lane2013-12-10
| | | | | | | | | | | | | An expression such as WHERE (... x IN (SELECT ...) ...) IN (SELECT ...) could produce an invalid plan that results in a crash at execution time, if the planner attempts to flatten the outer IN into a semi-join. This happens because convert_testexpr() was not expecting any nested SubLinks and would wrongly replace any PARAM_SUBLINK Params belonging to the inner SubLink. (I think the comment denying that this case could happen was wrong when written; it's certainly been wrong for quite a long time, since very early versions of the semijoin flattening logic.) Per report from Teodor Sigaev. Back-patch to all supported branches.
* Fix improper abort during update chain lockingAlvaro Herrera2013-12-05
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | In 247c76a98909, I added some code to do fine-grained checking of MultiXact status of locking/updating transactions when traversing an update chain. There was a thinko in that patch which would have the traversing abort, that is return HeapTupleUpdated, when the other transaction is a committed lock-only. In this case we should ignore it and return success instead. Of course, in the case where there is a committed update, HeapTupleUpdated is the correct return value. A user-visible symptom of this bug is that in REPEATABLE READ and SERIALIZABLE transaction isolation modes spurious serializability errors can occur: ERROR: could not serialize access due to concurrent update In order for this to happen, there needs to be a tuple that's key-share- locked and also updated, and the update must abort; a subsequent transaction trying to acquire a new lock on that tuple would abort with the above error. The reason is that the initial FOR KEY SHARE is seen as committed by the new locking transaction, which triggers this bug. (If the UPDATE commits, then the serialization error is correctly reported.) When running a query in READ COMMITTED mode, what happens is that the locking is aborted by the HeapTupleUpdated return value, then EvalPlanQual fetches the newest version of the tuple, which is then the only version that gets locked. (The second time the tuple is checked there is no misbehavior on the committed lock-only, because it's not checked by the code that traverses update chains; so no bug.) Only the newest version of the tuple is locked, not older ones, but this is harmless. The isolation test added by this commit illustrates the desired behavior, including the proper serialization errors that get thrown. Backpatch to 9.3.
* Clear retry flags properly in replacement OpenSSL sock_write function.Tom Lane2013-12-05
| | | | | | | | | | | | Current OpenSSL code includes a BIO_clear_retry_flags() step in the sock_write() function. Either we failed to copy the code correctly, or they added this since we copied it. In any case, lack of the clear step appears to be the cause of the server lockup after connection loss reported in bug #8647 from Valentine Gogichashvili. Assume that this is correct coding for all OpenSSL versions, and hence back-patch to all supported branches. Diagnosis and patch by Alexander Kukushkin.
* Avoid resetting Xmax when it's a multi with an aborted updateAlvaro Herrera2013-12-05
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | HeapTupleSatisfiesUpdate can very easily "forget" tuple locks while checking the contents of a multixact and finding it contains an aborted update, by setting the HEAP_XMAX_INVALID bit. This would lead to concurrent transactions not noticing any previous locks held by transactions that might still be running, and thus being able to acquire subsequent locks they wouldn't be normally able to acquire. This bug was introduced in commit 1ce150b7bb; backpatch this fix to 9.3, like that commit. This change reverts the change to the delete-abort-savept isolation test in 1ce150b7bb, because that behavior change was caused by this bug. Noticed by Andres Freund while investigating a different issue reported by Noah Misch.
* Fix full-page writes of internal GIN pages.Heikki Linnakangas2013-12-03
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Insertion to a non-leaf GIN page didn't make a full-page image of the page, which is wrong. The code used to do it correctly, but was changed (commit 853d1c3103fa961ae6219f0281885b345593d101) because the redo-routine didn't track incomplete splits correctly when the page was restored from a full page image. Of course, that was not right way to fix it, the redo routine should've been fixed instead. The redo-routine was surreptitiously fixed in 2010 (commit 4016bdef8aded77b4903c457050622a5a1815c16), so all we need to do now is revert the code that creates the record to its original form. This doesn't change the format of the WAL record. Backpatch to all supported versions.
* Fix crash in assign_collations_walker for EXISTS with empty SELECT list.Tom Lane2013-12-02
| | | | | We (I think I, actually) forgot about this corner case while coding collation resolution. Per bug #8648 from Arjen Nienhuis.
* Stamp 9.3.2.REL9_3_2Tom Lane2013-12-02
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* Translation updatesPeter Eisentraut2013-12-02
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* Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2013h.Tom Lane2013-12-01
| | | | | | DST law changes in Argentina, Brazil, Jordan, Libya, Liechtenstein, Morocco, Palestine. New timezone abbreviations WIB, WIT, WITA for Indonesia.
* Fix pg_dumpall to work for databases flagged as read-only.Kevin Grittner2013-11-30
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | pg_dumpall's charter is to be able to recreate a database cluster's contents in a virgin installation, but it was failing to honor that contract if the cluster had any ALTER DATABASE SET default_transaction_read_only settings. By including a SET command for the connection for each connection opened by pg_dumpall output, errors are avoided and the source cluster is successfully recreated. There was discussion of whether to also set this for the connection applying pg_dump output, but it was felt that it was both less appropriate in that context, and far easier to work around. Backpatch to all supported branches.
* Fix a couple of bugs in MultiXactId freezingAlvaro Herrera2013-11-29
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Both heap_freeze_tuple() and heap_tuple_needs_freeze() neglected to look into a multixact to check the members against cutoff_xid. This means that a very old Xid could survive hidden within a multi, possibly outliving its CLOG storage. In the distant future, this would cause clog lookup failures: ERROR: could not access status of transaction 3883960912 DETAIL: Could not open file "pg_clog/0E78": No such file or directory. This mostly was problematic when the updating transaction aborted, since in that case the row wouldn't get pruned away earlier in vacuum and the multixact could possibly survive for a long time. In many cases, data that is inaccessible for this reason way can be brought back heuristically. As a second bug, heap_freeze_tuple() didn't properly handle multixacts that need to be frozen according to cutoff_multi, but whose updater xid is still alive. Instead of preserving the update Xid, it just set Xmax invalid, which leads to both old and new tuple versions becoming visible. This is pretty rare in practice, but a real threat nonetheless. Existing corrupted rows, unfortunately, cannot be repaired in an automated fashion. Existing physical replicas might have already incorrectly frozen tuples because of different behavior than in master, which might only become apparent in the future once pg_multixact/ is truncated; it is recommended that all clones be rebuilt after upgrading. Following code analysis caused by bug report by J Smith in message CADFUPgc5bmtv-yg9znxV-vcfkb+JPRqs7m2OesQXaM_4Z1JpdQ@mail.gmail.com and privately by F-Secure. Backpatch to 9.3, where freezing of MultiXactIds was introduced. Analysis and patch by Andres Freund, with some tweaks by Álvaro.
* Don't TransactionIdDidAbort in HeapTupleGetUpdateXidAlvaro Herrera2013-11-29
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | It is dangerous to do so, because some code expects to be able to see what's the true Xmax even if it is aborted (particularly while traversing HOT chains). So don't do it, and instead rely on the callers to verify for abortedness, if necessary. Several race conditions and bugs fixed in the process. One isolation test changes the expected output due to these. This also reverts commit c235a6a589b, which is no longer necessary. Backpatch to 9.3, where this function was introduced. Andres Freund
* Truncate pg_multixact/'s contents during crash recoveryAlvaro Herrera2013-11-29
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Commit 9dc842f08 of 8.2 era prevented MultiXact truncation during crash recovery, because there was no guarantee that enough state had been setup, and because it wasn't deemed to be a good idea to remove data during crash recovery anyway. Since then, due to Hot-Standby, streaming replication and PITR, the amount of time a cluster can spend doing crash recovery has increased significantly, to the point that a cluster may even never come out of it. This has made not truncating the content of pg_multixact/ not defensible anymore. To fix, take care to setup enough state for multixact truncation before crash recovery starts (easy since checkpoints contain the required information), and move the current end-of-recovery actions to a new TrimMultiXact() function, analogous to TrimCLOG(). At some later point, this should probably done similarly to the way clog.c is doing it, which is to just WAL log truncations, but we can't do that for the back branches. Back-patch to 9.0. 8.4 also has the problem, but since there's no hot standby there, it's much less pressing. In 9.2 and earlier, this patch is simpler than in newer branches, because multixact access during recovery isn't required. Add appropriate checks to make sure that's not happening. Andres Freund
* Fix full-table-vacuum request mechanism for MultiXactIdsAlvaro Herrera2013-11-29
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | While autovacuum dutifully launched anti-multixact-wraparound vacuums when the multixact "age" was reached, the vacuum code was not aware that it needed to make them be full table vacuums. As the resulting partial-table vacuums aren't capable of actually increasing relminmxid, autovacuum continued to launch anti-wraparound vacuums that didn't have the intended effect, until age of relfrozenxid caused the vacuum to finally be a full table one via vacuum_freeze_table_age. To fix, introduce logic for multixacts similar to that for plain TransactionIds, using the same GUCs. Backpatch to 9.3, where permanent MultiXactIds were introduced. Andres Freund, some cleanup by Álvaro
* Replace hardcoded 200000000 with autovacuum_freeze_max_ageAlvaro Herrera2013-11-29
| | | | | | | | | | | | Parts of the code used autovacuum_freeze_max_age to determine whether anti-multixact-wraparound vacuums are necessary, while others used a hardcoded 200000000 value. This leads to problems when autovacuum_freeze_max_age is set to a non-default value. Use the latter everywhere. Backpatch to 9.3, where vacuuming of multixacts was introduced. Andres Freund
* Fix assorted issues in pg_ctl's pgwin32_CommandLine().Tom Lane2013-11-29
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Ensure that the invocation command for postgres or pg_ctl runservice double-quotes the executable's pathname; failure to do this leads to trouble when the path contains spaces. Also, ensure that the path ends in ".exe" in both cases and uses backslashes rather than slashes as directory separators. The latter issue is reported to confuse some third-party tools such as Symantec Backup Exec. Also, rewrite the function to avoid buffer overrun issues by using a PQExpBuffer instead of a fixed-size static buffer. Combinations of very long executable pathnames and very long data directory pathnames could have caused trouble before, for example. Back-patch to all active branches, since this code has been like this for a long while. Naoya Anzai and Tom Lane, reviewed by Rajeev Rastogi
* Be sure to release proc->backendLock after SetupLockInTable() failure.Tom Lane2013-11-29
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | The various places that transferred fast-path locks to the main lock table neglected to release the PGPROC's backendLock if SetupLockInTable failed due to being out of shared memory. In most cases this is no big deal since ensuing error cleanup would release all held LWLocks anyway. But there are some hot-standby functions that don't consider failure of FastPathTransferRelationLocks to be a hard error, and in those cases this oversight could lead to system lockup. For consistency, make all of these places look the same as FastPathTransferRelationLocks. Noted while looking for the cause of Dan Wood's bugs --- this wasn't it, but it's a bug anyway.
* Fix assorted race conditions in the new timeout infrastructure.Tom Lane2013-11-29
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Prevent handle_sig_alarm from losing control partway through due to a query cancel (either an asynchronous SIGINT, or a cancel triggered by one of the timeout handler functions). That would at least result in failure to schedule any required future interrupt, and might result in actual corruption of timeout.c's data structures, if the interrupt happened while we were updating those. We could still lose control if an asynchronous SIGINT arrives just as the function is entered. This wouldn't break any data structures, but it would have the same effect as if the SIGALRM interrupt had been silently lost: we'd not fire any currently-due handlers, nor schedule any new interrupt. To forestall that scenario, forcibly reschedule any pending timer interrupt during AbortTransaction and AbortSubTransaction. We can avoid any extra kernel call in most cases by not doing that until we've allowed LockErrorCleanup to kill the DEADLOCK_TIMEOUT and LOCK_TIMEOUT events. Another hazard is that some platforms (at least Linux and *BSD) block a signal before calling its handler and then unblock it on return. When we longjmp out of the handler, the unblock doesn't happen, and the signal is left blocked indefinitely. Again, we can fix that by forcibly unblocking signals during AbortTransaction and AbortSubTransaction. These latter two problems do not manifest when the longjmp reaches postgres.c, because the error recovery code there kills all pending timeout events anyway, and it uses sigsetjmp(..., 1) so that the appropriate signal mask is restored. So errors thrown outside any transaction should be OK already, and cleaning up in AbortTransaction and AbortSubTransaction should be enough to fix these issues. (We're assuming that any code that catches a query cancel error and doesn't re-throw it will do at least a subtransaction abort to clean up; but that was pretty much required already by other subsystems.) Lastly, ProcSleep should not clear the LOCK_TIMEOUT indicator flag when disabling that event: if a lock timeout interrupt happened after the lock was granted, the ensuing query cancel is still going to happen at the next CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS, and we want to report it as a lock timeout not a user cancel. Per reports from Dan Wood. Back-patch to 9.3 where the new timeout handling infrastructure was introduced. We may at some point decide to back-patch the signal unblocking changes further, but I'll desist from that until we hear actual field complaints about it.
* Fix latent(?) race condition in LockReleaseAll.Tom Lane2013-11-28
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | We have for a long time checked the head pointer of each of the backend's proclock lists and skipped acquiring the corresponding locktable partition lock if the head pointer was NULL. This was safe enough in the days when proclock lists were changed only by the owning backend, but it is pretty questionable now that the fast-path patch added cases where backends add entries to other backends' proclock lists. However, we don't really wish to revert to locking each partition lock every time, because in simple transactions that would add a lot of useless lock/unlock cycles on already-heavily-contended LWLocks. Fortunately, the only way that another backend could be modifying our proclock list at this point would be if it was promoting a formerly fast-path lock of ours; and any such lock must be one that we'd decided not to delete in the previous loop over the locallock table. So it's okay if we miss seeing it in this loop; we'd just decide not to delete it again. However, once we've detected a non-empty list, we'd better re-fetch the list head pointer after acquiring the partition lock. This guards against possibly fetching a corrupt-but-non-null pointer if pointer fetch/store isn't atomic. It's not clear if any practical architectures are like that, but we've never assumed that before and don't wish to start here. In any case, the situation certainly deserves a code comment. While at it, refactor the partition traversal loop to use a for() construct instead of a while() loop with goto's. Back-patch, just in case the risk is real and not hypothetical.
* Use a more granular approach to follow update chainsAlvaro Herrera2013-11-28
| | | | | | | | Instead of simply checking the KEYS_UPDATED bit, we need to check whether each lock held on the future version of the tuple conflicts with the lock we're trying to acquire. Per bug report #8434 by Tomonari Katsumata
* Compare Xmin to previous Xmax when locking an update chainAlvaro Herrera2013-11-28
| | | | | | | | | | | | Not doing so causes us to traverse an update chain that has been broken by concurrent page pruning. All other code that traverses update chains uses this check as one of the cases in which to stop iterating, so replicate it here too. Failure to do so leads to erroneous CLOG, subtrans or multixact lookups. Per discussion following the bug report by J Smith in CADFUPgc5bmtv-yg9znxV-vcfkb+JPRqs7m2OesQXaM_4Z1JpdQ@mail.gmail.com as diagnosed by Andres Freund.
* Don't try to set InvalidXid as page pruning hintAlvaro Herrera2013-11-28
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | If a transaction updates/deletes a tuple just before aborting, and a concurrent transaction tries to prune the page concurrently, the pruner may see HeapTupleSatisfiesVacuum return HEAPTUPLE_DELETE_IN_PROGRESS, but a later call to HeapTupleGetUpdateXid() return InvalidXid. This would cause an assertion failure in development builds, but would be otherwise Mostly Harmless. Fix by checking whether the updater Xid is valid before trying to apply it as page prune point. Reported by Andres in 20131124000203.GA4403@alap2.anarazel.de
* Cope with heap_fetch failure while locking an update chainAlvaro Herrera2013-11-28
| | | | | | | | | | | The reason for the fetch failure is that the tuple was removed because it was dead; so the failure is innocuous and can be ignored. Moreover, there's no need for further work and we can return success to the caller immediately. EvalPlanQualFetch is doing something very similar to this already. Report and test case from Andres Freund in 20131124000203.GA4403@alap2.anarazel.de
* Fix stale-pointer problem in fast-path locking logic.Tom Lane2013-11-27
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | When acquiring a lock in fast-path mode, we must reset the locallock object's lock and proclock fields to NULL. They are not necessarily that way to start with, because the locallock could be left over from a failed lock acquisition attempt earlier in the transaction. Failure to do this led to all sorts of interesting misbehaviors when LockRelease tried to clean up no-longer-related lock and proclock objects in shared memory. Per report from Dan Wood. In passing, modify LockRelease to elog not just Assert if it doesn't find lock and proclock objects for a formerly fast-path lock, matching the code in FastPathGetRelationLockEntry and LockRefindAndRelease. This isn't a bug but it will help in diagnosing any future bugs in this area. Also, modify FastPathTransferRelationLocks and FastPathGetRelationLockEntry to break out of their loops over the fastpath array once they've found the sole matching entry. This was inconsistently done in some search loops and not others. Improve assorted related comments, too. Back-patch to 9.2 where the fast-path mechanism was introduced.
* Don't update relfrozenxid if any pages were skipped.Heikki Linnakangas2013-11-27
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Vacuum recognizes that it can update relfrozenxid by checking whether it has processed all pages of a relation. Unfortunately it performed that check after truncating the dead pages at the end of the relation, and used the new number of pages to decide whether all pages have been scanned. If the new number of pages happened to be smaller or equal to the number of pages scanned, it incorrectly decided that all pages were scanned. This can lead to relfrozenxid being updated, even though some pages were skipped that still contain old XIDs. That can lead to data loss due to xid wraparounds with some rows suddenly missing. This likely has escaped notice so far because it takes a large number (~2^31) of xids being used to see the effect, while a full-table vacuum before that would fix the issue. The incorrect logic was introduced by commit b4b6923e03f4d29636a94f6f4cc2f5cf6298b8c8. Backpatch this fix down to 8.4, like that commit. Andres Freund, with some modifications by me.
* ECPG: Fix searching for quoted cursor names case-sensitively.Michael Meskes2013-11-27
| | | | Patch by Böszörményi Zoltán <zb@cybertec.at>
* ECPG: Fix offset to NULL/size indicator array.Michael Meskes2013-11-26
| | | | Patch by Boszormenyi Zoltan <zb@cybertec.at>
* ECPG: Make the preprocessor emit ';' if the variable type for a list ofMichael Meskes2013-11-26
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | variables is varchar. This fixes this test case: int main(void) { exec sql begin declare section; varchar a[50], b[50]; exec sql end declare section; return 0; } Since varchars are internally turned into custom structs and the type name is emitted for these variable declarations, the preprocessed code previously had: struct varchar_1 { ... } a _,_ struct varchar_2 { ... } b ; The comma in the generated C file was a syntax error. There are no regression test changes since it's not exercised. Patch by Boszormenyi Zoltan <zb@cybertec.at>
* Fix array slicing of int2vector and oidvector values.Tom Lane2013-11-23
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The previous coding labeled expressions such as pg_index.indkey[1:3] as being of int2vector type; which is not right because the subscript bounds of such a result don't, in general, satisfy the restrictions of int2vector. To fix, implicitly promote the result of slicing int2vector to int2[], or oidvector to oid[]. This is similar to what we've done with domains over arrays, which is a good analogy because these types are very much like restricted domains of the corresponding regular-array types. A side-effect is that we now also forbid array-element updates on such columns, eg while "update pg_index set indkey[4] = 42" would have worked before if you were superuser (and corrupted your catalogs irretrievably, no doubt) it's now disallowed. This seems like a good thing since, again, some choices of subscripting would've led to results not satisfying the restrictions of int2vector. The case of an array-slice update was rejected before, though with a different error message than you get now. We could make these cases work in future if we added a cast from int2[] to int2vector (with a cast function checking the subscript restrictions) but it seems unlikely that there's any value in that. Per report from Ronan Dunklau. Back-patch to all supported branches because of the crash risks involved.
* Ensure _dosmaperr() actually sets errno correctly.Tom Lane2013-11-23
| | | | | | | | | | | | If logging is enabled, either ereport() or fprintf() might stomp on errno internally, causing this function to return the wrong result. That might only end in a misleading error report, but in any code that's examining errno to decide what to do next, the consequences could be far graver. This has been broken since the very first version of this file in 2006 ... it's a bit astonishing that we didn't identify this long ago. Reported by Amit Kapila, though this isn't his proposed fix.
* Avoid potential buffer overflow crashPeter Eisentraut2013-11-23
| | | | | | | | | | A pointer to a C string was treated as a pointer to a "name" datum and passed to SPI_execute_plan(). This pointer would then end up being passed through datumCopy(), which would try to copy the entire 64 bytes of name data, thus running past the end of the C string. Fix by converting the string to a proper name structure. Found by LLVM AddressSanitizer.
* Flatten join alias Vars before pulling up targetlist items from a subquery.Tom Lane2013-11-22
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | pullup_replace_vars()'s decisions about whether a pulled-up replacement expression needs to be wrapped in a PlaceHolderVar depend on the assumption that what looks like a Var behaves like a Var. However, if the Var is a join alias reference, later flattening of join aliases might replace the Var with something that's not a Var at all, and should have been wrapped. To fix, do a forcible pass of flatten_join_alias_vars() on the subquery targetlist before we start to copy items out of it. We'll re-run that processing on the pulled-up expressions later, but that's harmless. Per report from Ken Tanzer; the added regression test case is based on his example. This bug has been there since the PlaceHolderVar mechanism was invented, but has escaped detection because the circumstances that trigger it are fairly narrow. You need a flattenable query underneath an outer join, which contains another flattenable query inside a join of its own, with a dangerous expression (a constant or something else non-strict) in that one's targetlist. Having seen this, I'm wondering if it wouldn't be prudent to do all alias-variable flattening earlier, perhaps even in the rewriter. But that would probably not be a back-patchable change.
* Fix Hot-Standby initialization of clog and subtrans.Heikki Linnakangas2013-11-22
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | These bugs can cause data loss on standbys started with hot_standby=on at the moment they start to accept read only queries, by marking committed transactions as uncommited. The likelihood of such corruptions is small unless the primary has a high transaction rate. 5a031a5556ff83b8a9646892715d7fef415b83c3 fixed bugs in HS's startup logic by maintaining less state until at least STANDBY_SNAPSHOT_PENDING state was reached, missing the fact that both clog and subtrans are written to before that. This only failed to fail in common cases because the usage of ExtendCLOG in procarray.c was superflous since clog extensions are actually WAL logged. f44eedc3f0f347a856eea8590730769125964597/I then tried to fix the missing extensions of pg_subtrans due to the former commit's changes - which are not WAL logged - by performing the extensions when switching to a state > STANDBY_INITIALIZED and not performing xid assignments before that - again missing the fact that ExtendCLOG is unneccessary - but screwed up twice: Once because latestObservedXid wasn't updated anymore in that state due to the earlier commit and once by having an off-by-one error in the loop performing extensions. This means that whenever a CLOG_XACTS_PER_PAGE (32768 with default settings) boundary was crossed between the start of the checkpoint recovery started from and the first xl_running_xact record old transactions commit bits in pg_clog could be overwritten if they started and committed in that window. Fix this mess by not performing ExtendCLOG() in HS at all anymore since it's unneeded and evidently dangerous and by performing subtrans extensions even before reaching STANDBY_SNAPSHOT_PENDING. Analysis and patch by Andres Freund. Reported by Christophe Pettus. Backpatch down to 9.0, like the previous commit that caused this.
* Fix pg_isready to handle -d option properly.Fujii Masao2013-11-21
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | Previously, -d option for pg_isready was broken. When the name of the database was specified by -d option, pg_isready failed with an error. When the conninfo specified by -d option contained the setting of the host name but not Numeric IP address (i.e., hostaddr), pg_isready displayed wrong connection message. -d option could not handle a valid URI prefix at all. This commit fixes these bugs of pg_isready. Backpatch to 9.3, where pg_isready was introduced. Per report from Josh Berkus and Robert Haas. Original patch by Fabrízio de Royes Mello, heavily modified by me.