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2016-04-26Fix order of shutdown cleanup operations in PostgresNode.pm.Tom Lane
Previously, database clusters created by a TAP test were shut down by DESTROY methods attached to the PostgresNode objects representing them. The trouble with that is that if the objects survive into the final global destruction phase (which they do), Perl executes the DESTROY methods in an unspecified order. Thus, the order of shutdown of multiple clusters was indeterminate, which might lead to not-very-reproducible errors getting logged (eg from a slave whose master might or might not get killed first). Worse, the File::Temp objects representing the temporary PGDATA directories might get destroyed before the PostgresNode objects, resulting in attempts to delete PGDATA directories that still have live servers in them. On Windows, this would lead to directory deletion failures; on Unix, it usually had no effects worse than erratic "could not open temporary statistics file "pg_stat/global.tmp": No such file or directory" log messages. While none of this would affect the reported result of the TAP test, which is already determined, it could be very confusing when one is trying to understand from the logs what went wrong with a failed test. To fix, do the postmaster shutdowns in an END block rather than at object destruction time. The END block will execute at a well-defined (and reasonable) time during script termination, and it will stop the postmasters in order of PostgresNode object creation. (Perhaps we should change that to be reverse order of creation, but the main point here is that we now have control which we did not before.) Use "pg_ctl stop", not an asynchronous kill(SIGQUIT), so that we wait for the postmasters to shut down before proceeding with directory deletion. Deletion of temporary directories still happens in an unspecified order during global destruction, but I can see no reason to care about that once the postmasters are stopped.
2016-04-25Try harder to detect a port conflict in PostgresNode.pm.Tom Lane
Commit fab84c7787f25756 tried to get away without doing an actual bind(), but buildfarm results show that that doesn't get the job done. So we must really bind to the target port --- and at least on my Linux box, we need a listen() as well, or conflicts won't be detected. We rely on SO_REUSEADDR to prevent problems from starting a postmaster on the socket immediately after we've bound to it in the test code. (There may be platforms where that doesn't work too well. But fortunately, we only really care whether this works on Windows, and there the default behavior should be OK.)
2016-04-24Improve PostgresNode.pm's logic for detecting already-in-use ports.Tom Lane
Buildfarm members bowerbird and jacana have shown intermittent "could not bind IPv4 socket" failures in the BinInstallCheck stage since mid-December, shortly after commits 1caef31d9e550408 and 9821492ee417a591 changed the logic for selecting which port to use in temporary installations. One plausible explanation is that we are randomly selecting ports that are already in use for some non-Postgres purpose. Although the code tried to defend against already-in-use ports, it used pg_isready to probe the port which is quite unhelpful: if some non-Postgres server responds at the given address, pg_isready will generally say "no response", leading to exactly the wrong conclusion about whether the port is free. Instead, let's use a simple TCP connect() call to see if anything answers without making assumptions about what it is. Note that this means there's no direct check for a conflicting Unix socket, but that should be okay because there should be no other Unix sockets in use in the temporary socket directory created for a test run. This is only a partial solution for the TCP case, since if the port number is in use for an outgoing connection rather than a listening socket, we'll fail to detect that. We could try to bind() to the proposed port as a means of detecting that case, but that would introduce its own failure modes, since the system might consider the address to remain reserved for some period of time after we drop the bound socket. Close study of the errors returned by bowerbird and jacana suggests that what we're seeing there may be conflicts with listening not outgoing sockets, so let's try this and see if it improves matters. It's certainly better than what's there now, in any case. Michael Paquier, adjusted by me to work on non-Windows as well as Windows
2016-04-22Fix planner failure with full join in RHS of left join.Tom Lane
Given a left join containing a full join in its righthand side, with the left join's joinclause referencing only one side of the full join (in a non-strict fashion, so that the full join doesn't get simplified), the planner could fail with "failed to build any N-way joins" or related errors. This happened because the full join was seen as overlapping the left join's RHS, and then recent changes within join_is_legal() caused that function to conclude that the full join couldn't validly be formed. Rather than try to rejigger join_is_legal() yet more to allow this, I think it's better to fix initsplan.c so that the required join order is explicit in the SpecialJoinInfo data structure. The previous coding there essentially ignored full joins, relying on the fact that we don't flatten them in the joinlist data structure to preserve their ordering. That's sufficient to prevent a wrong plan from being formed, but as this example shows, it's not sufficient to ensure that the right plan will be formed. We need to work a bit harder to ensure that the right plan looks sane according to the SpecialJoinInfos. Per bug #14105 from Vojtech Rylko. This was apparently induced by commit 8703059c6 (though now that I've seen it, I wonder whether there are related cases that could have failed before that); so back-patch to all active branches. Unfortunately, that patch also went into 9.0, so this bug is a regression that won't be fixed in that branch.
2016-04-21Fix ruleutils.c's dumping of ScalarArrayOpExpr containing an EXPR_SUBLINK.Tom Lane
When we shoehorned "x op ANY (array)" into the SQL syntax, we created a fundamental ambiguity as to the proper treatment of a sub-SELECT on the righthand side: perhaps what's meant is to compare x against each row of the sub-SELECT's result, or perhaps the sub-SELECT is meant as a scalar sub-SELECT that delivers a single array value whose members should be compared against x. The grammar resolves it as the former case whenever the RHS is a select_with_parens, making the latter case hard to reach --- but you can get at it, with tricks such as attaching a no-op cast to the sub-SELECT. Parse analysis would throw away the no-op cast, leaving a parsetree with an EXPR_SUBLINK SubLink directly under a ScalarArrayOpExpr. ruleutils.c was not clued in on this fine point, and would naively emit "x op ANY ((SELECT ...))", which would be parsed as the first alternative, typically leading to errors like "operator does not exist: text = text[]" during dump/reload of a view or rule containing such a construct. To fix, emit a no-op cast when dumping such a parsetree. This might well be exactly what the user wrote to get the construct accepted in the first place; and even if she got there with some other dodge, it is a valid representation of the parsetree. Per report from Karl Czajkowski. He mentioned only a case involving RLS policies, but actually the problem is very old, so back-patch to all supported branches. Report: <[email protected]>
2016-04-21Honor PGCTLTIMEOUT environment variable for pg_regress' startup wait.Tom Lane
In commit 2ffa86962077c588 we made pg_ctl recognize an environment variable PGCTLTIMEOUT to set the default timeout for starting and stopping the postmaster. However, pg_regress uses pg_ctl only for the "stop" end of that; it has bespoke code for starting the postmaster, and that code has historically had a hard-wired 60-second timeout. Further buildfarm experience says it'd be a good idea if that timeout were also controlled by PGCTLTIMEOUT, so let's make it so. Like the previous patch, back-patch to all active branches. Discussion: <[email protected]>
2016-04-19Improve regression tests for degree-based trigonometric functions.Tom Lane
Print the actual value of each function result that's expected to be exact, rather than merely emitting a NULL if it's not right. Although we print these with extra_float_digits = 3, we should not trust that the platform will produce a result visibly different from the expected value if it's off only in the last place; hence, also include comparisons against the exact values as before. This is a bit bulkier and uglier than the previous printout, but it will provide more information and be easier to interpret if there's a test failure. Discussion: <[email protected]>
2016-04-16Disallow creation of indexes on system columns (except for OID).Tom Lane
Although OID acts pretty much like user data, the other system columns do not, so an index on one would likely misbehave. And it's pretty hard to see a use-case for one, anyway. Let's just forbid the case rather than worry about whether it should be supported. David Rowley
2016-04-16In recordExtensionInitPriv(), keep the scan til we're done with itStephen Frost
For reasons of sheer brain fade, we (I) was calling systable_endscan() immediately after systable_getnext() and expecting the tuple returned by systable_getnext() to still be valid. That's clearly wrong. Move the systable_endscan() down below the tuple usage. Discovered initially by Pavel Stehule and then also by Alvaro. Add a regression test based on Alvaro's testing.
2016-04-15Use less-generic names in matview.sql.Tom Lane
The original coding of this test used table and view names like "t", "tv", "foo", etc. This tended to interfere with doing simple manual tests in the regression database; not to mention that it posed a considerable risk of conflict with other regression test scripts. Prefix these names with "mvtest_" to avoid such conflicts. Also, change transiently-created role name to be "regress_xxx" per discussions about being careful with regression-test role creation.
2016-04-15Fix possible crash in ALTER TABLE ... REPLICA IDENTITY USING INDEX.Tom Lane
Careless coding added by commit 07cacba983ef79be could result in a crash or a bizarre error message if someone tried to select an index on the OID column as the replica identity index for a table. Back-patch to 9.4 where the feature was introduced. Discussion: CAKJS1f8TQYgTRDyF1_u9PVCKWRWz+DkieH=U7954HeHVPJKaKg@mail.gmail.com David Rowley
2016-04-15Make regression test for multiple synchronous standbys more stable.Fujii Masao
The regression test checks whether the output of pg_stat_replication is expected or not after changing synchronous_standby_names and reloading the configuration file. Regarding this test logic, previously there was a timing issue which made the test result unstable. That is, pg_stat_replication could return unexpected result during small window after the configuration file was reloaded before new setting value took effect, and which made the test fail. This commit changes the test logic so that it uses a loop with a timeout to give some room for the test to pass. Now the test fails only when pg_stat_replication keeps returning unexpected result for 30 seconds. Michael Paquier
2016-04-15Rethink \crosstabview's argument parsing logic.Tom Lane
\crosstabview interpreted its arguments in an unusual way, including doing case-insensitive matching of unquoted column names, which is surely not the right thing. Rip that out in favor of doing something equivalent to the dequoting/case-folding rules used by other psql commands. To keep it simple, change the syntax so that the optional sort column is specified as a separate argument, instead of the also-quite-unusual syntax that attached it to the colH argument with a colon. Also, rework the error messages to be closer to project style.
2016-04-14Fix broken dependency-mongering for index operator classes/families.Tom Lane
For a long time, opclasscmds.c explained that "we do not create a dependency link to the AM [for an opclass or opfamily], because we don't currently support DROP ACCESS METHOD". Commit 473b93287040b200 invented DROP ACCESS METHOD, but it batted only 1 for 2 on adding the dependency links, and 0 for 2 on updating the comments about the topic. In passing, undo the same commit's entirely inappropriate decision to blow away an existing index as a side-effect of create_am.sql.
2016-04-11Fix two places that thought Windows64 is indicated by WIN64 macro.Tom Lane
Everyplace else thinks it's _WIN64, so make these places fall in line. The pg_regress.c usage is not going to result in any change in behavior, only suppressing (or not) a compiler warning about downcasting HANDLEs. So there seems no need for back-patching there. The libpq/win32.mak usage might represent an actual bug, if anyone were using this script to build for Windows64, which perhaps nobody is. Given the lack of field complaints, no back-patch here either. pg_regress.c problem found by Christian Ullrich, the other by me.
2016-04-11Fix whitespacePeter Eisentraut
2016-04-11Prefix RLS regression test roles with 'regress_'Stephen Frost
To avoid any possible overlap with existing roles on a system when doing a 'make installcheck', use role names which start with 'regress_'. Pointed out by Tom.
2016-04-11Add directory created during build to gitignorePeter Eisentraut
2016-04-09Move \crosstabview regression tests to a separate fileAlvaro Herrera
It cannot run in the same parallel group as misc, because it creates a table which is unpredictably visible in that test. Per buildfarm member crake.
2016-04-08Support \crosstabview in psqlAlvaro Herrera
\crosstabview is a completely different way to display results from a query: instead of a vertical display of rows, the data values are placed in a grid where the column and row headers come from the data itself, similar to a spreadsheet. The sort order of the horizontal header can be specified by using another column in the query, and the vertical header determines its ordering from the order in which they appear in the query. This only allows displaying a single value in each cell. If more than one value correspond to the same cell, an error is thrown. Merging of values can be done in the query itself, if necessary. This may be revisited in the future. Author: Daniel Verité Reviewed-by: Pavel Stehule, Dean Rasheed
2016-04-08Create default rolesStephen Frost
This creates an initial set of default roles which administrators may use to grant access to, historically, superuser-only functions. Using these roles instead of granting superuser access reduces the number of superuser roles required for a system. Documention for each of the default roles has been added to user-manag.sgml. Bump catversion to 201604082, as we had a commit that bumped it to 201604081 and another that set it back to 201604071... Reviews by José Luis Tallón and Robert Haas
2016-04-08Reserve the "pg_" namespace for rolesStephen Frost
This will prevent users from creating roles which begin with "pg_" and will check for those roles before allowing an upgrade using pg_upgrade. This will allow for default roles to be provided at initdb time. Reviews by José Luis Tallón and Robert Haas
2016-04-08Add the "snapshot too old" featureKevin Grittner
This feature is controlled by a new old_snapshot_threshold GUC. A value of -1 disables the feature, and that is the default. The value of 0 is just intended for testing. Above that it is the number of minutes a snapshot can reach before pruning and vacuum are allowed to remove dead tuples which the snapshot would otherwise protect. The xmin associated with a transaction ID does still protect dead tuples. A connection which is using an "old" snapshot does not get an error unless it accesses a page modified recently enough that it might not be able to produce accurate results. This is similar to the Oracle feature, and we use the same SQLSTATE and error message for compatibility.
2016-04-08Revert CREATE INDEX ... INCLUDING ...Teodor Sigaev
It's not ready yet, revert two commits 690c543550b0d2852060c18d270cdb534d339d9a - unstable test output 386e3d7609c49505e079c40c65919d99feb82505 - patch itself
2016-04-08Fix unstable regression test output.Tom Lane
Output order from the pg_indexes view might vary depending on the phase of the moon, so add ORDER BY to ensure stable results of tests added by commit 386e3d7609c49505e079c40c65919d99feb82505. Per buildfarm.
2016-04-08Restore original tsquery operation numbering.Teodor Sigaev
As noticed by Tom Lane changing operation's number in commit bb140506df605fab58f48926ee1db1f80bdafb59 causes on-disk format incompatibility. Revert to previous numbering, that is reason to add special array to store priorities of operation. Also it reverts order of tsquery to previous. Author: Dmitry Ivanov
2016-04-08CREATE INDEX ... INCLUDING (column[, ...])Teodor Sigaev
Now indexes (but only B-tree for now) can contain "extra" column(s) which doesn't participate in index structure, they are just stored in leaf tuples. It allows to use index only scan by using single index instead of two or more indexes. Author: Anastasia Lubennikova with minor editorializing by me Reviewers: David Rowley, Peter Geoghegan, Jeff Janes
2016-04-08Replace printf format %i by %dPeter Eisentraut
see also ce8d7bb6440710058503d213b2aafcdf56a5b481
2016-04-08Add regression tests for multiple synchronous standbys.Fujii Masao
Authors: Suraj Kharage, Michael Paquier, Masahiko Sawada, refactored by me Reviewed-By: Kyotaro Horiguchi
2016-04-08Use Foreign Key relationships to infer multi-column join selectivitySimon Riggs
In cases where joins use multiple columns we currently assess each join separately causing gross mis-estimates for join cardinality. This patch adds use of FK information for the first time into the planner. When FKs are present and we have multi-column join information, plan estimates will be drastically improved. Cases with multiple FKs are handled, though partial matches are ignored currently. Net effect is substantial performance improvements for joins in many common cases. Additional planning time is isolated to cases that are currently performing poorly, measured at 0.08 - 0.15 ms. Please watch for planner performance regressions; circumstances seem unlikely but the law of unintended consequences may apply somewhen. Additional complex tests welcome to prove this before release. Tests can be performed using SET enable_fkey_estimates = on | off using scripts provided during Hackers discussions, message id: [email protected] Authors: Tomas Vondra and David Rowley Reviewed and tested by Simon Riggs, adding comments only
2016-04-07GRANT rights to CURRENT_USER instead of adding rolesStephen Frost
We shouldn't be adding roles during the regression tests as that can cause back-to-back installcheck runs to fail and users running the regression tests likley don't want those extra roles. Pointed out by Tom
2016-04-07Make testing of phraseto_tsquery independ from value ofTeodor Sigaev
default_text_search_config variable. Per skink buldfarm member
2016-04-07Detect SSI conflicts before reporting constraint violationsKevin Grittner
While prior to this patch the user-visible effect on the database of any set of successfully committed serializable transactions was always consistent with some one-at-a-time order of execution of those transactions, the presence of declarative constraints could allow errors to occur which were not possible in any such ordering, and developers had no good workarounds to prevent user-facing errors where they were not necessary or desired. This patch adds a check for serialization failure ahead of duplicate key checking so that if a developer explicitly (redundantly) checks for the pre-existing value they will get the desired serialization failure where the problem is caused by a concurrent serializable transaction; otherwise they will get a duplicate key error. While it would be better if the reads performed by the constraints could count as part of the work of the transaction for serialization failure checking, and we will hopefully get there some day, this patch allows a clean and reliable way for developers to work around the issue. In many cases existing code will already be doing the right thing for this to "just work". Author: Thomas Munro, with minor editing of docs by me Reviewed-by: Marko Tiikkaja, Kevin Grittner
2016-04-07Phrase full text search.Teodor Sigaev
Patch introduces new text search operator (<-> or <DISTANCE>) into tsquery. On-disk and binary in/out format of tsquery are backward compatible. It has two side effect: - change order for tsquery, so, users, who has a btree index over tsquery, should reindex it - less number of parenthesis in tsquery output, and tsquery becomes more readable Authors: Teodor Sigaev, Oleg Bartunov, Dmitry Ivanov Reviewers: Alexander Korotkov, Artur Zakirov
2016-04-07Standardize GetTokenInformation() error reporting.Noah Misch
Commit c22650cd6450854e1a75064b698d7dcbb4a8821a sparked a discussion about diverse interpretations of "token user" in error messages. Expel old and new specimens of that phrase by making all GetTokenInformation() callers report errors the way GetTokenUser() has been reporting them. These error conditions almost can't happen, so users are unlikely to observe this change. Reviewed by Tom Lane and Stephen Frost.
2016-04-07In pg_dump, include pg_catalog and extension ACLs, if changedStephen Frost
Now that all of the infrastructure exists, add in the ability to dump out the ACLs of the objects inside of pg_catalog or the ACLs for objects which are members of extensions, but only if they have been changed from their original values. The original values are tracked in pg_init_privs. When pg_dump'ing 9.6-and-above databases, we will dump out the ACLs for all objects in pg_catalog and the ACLs for all extension members, where the ACL has been changed from the original value which was set during either initdb or CREATE EXTENSION. This should not change dumps against pre-9.6 databases. Reviews by Alexander Korotkov, Jose Luis Tallon
2016-04-07Add new catalog called pg_init_privsStephen Frost
This new catalog holds the privileges which the system was initialized with at initdb time, along with any permissions set by extensions at CREATE EXTENSION time. This allows pg_dump (and any other similar use-cases) to detect when the privileges set on initdb-created or extension-created objects have been changed from what they were set to at initdb/extension-creation time and handle those changes appropriately. Reviews by Alexander Korotkov, Jose Luis Tallon
2016-04-06Add jsonb_insertTeodor Sigaev
It inserts a new value into an jsonb array at arbitrary position or a new key to jsonb object. Author: Dmitry Dolgov Reviewers: Petr Jelinek, Vitaly Burovoy, Andrew Dunstan
2016-04-05Support ALTER THING .. DEPENDS ON EXTENSIONAlvaro Herrera
This introduces a new dependency type which marks an object as depending on an extension, such that if the extension is dropped, the object automatically goes away; and also, if the database is dumped, the object is included in the dump output. Currently the grammar supports this for indexes, triggers, materialized views and functions only, although the utility code is generic so adding support for more object types is a matter of touching the parser rules only. Author: Abhijit Menon-Sen Reviewed-by: Alexander Korotkov, Álvaro Herrera Discussion: http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/[email protected]
2016-04-05Fix parallel-safety code for parallel aggregation.Robert Haas
has_parallel_hazard() was ignoring the proparallel markings for aggregates, which is no good. Fix that. There was no way to mark an aggregate as actually being parallel-safe, either, so add a PARALLEL option to CREATE AGGREGATE. Patch by me, reviewed by David Rowley.
2016-04-05Add parallel query support functions for assorted aggregates.Robert Haas
This lets us use parallel aggregate for a variety of useful cases that didn't work before, like sum(int8), sum(numeric), several versions of avg(), and various other functions. Add some regression tests, as well, testing the general sanity of these and future catalog entries. David Rowley, reviewed by Tomas Vondra, with a few further changes by me.
2016-04-04Add a \gexec command to psql for evaluation of computed queries.Tom Lane
\gexec executes the just-entered query, like \g, but instead of printing the results it takes each field as a SQL command to send to the server. Computing a series of queries to be executed is a fairly common thing, but up to now you always had to resort to kluges like writing the queries to a file and then inputting the file. Now it can be done with no intermediate step. The implementation is fairly straightforward except for its interaction with FETCH_COUNT. ExecQueryUsingCursor isn't capable of being called recursively, and even if it were, its need to create a transaction block interferes unpleasantly with the desired behavior of \gexec after a failure of a generated query (i.e., that it can continue). Therefore, disable use of ExecQueryUsingCursor when doing the master \gexec query. We can still apply it to individual generated queries, however, and there might be some value in doing so. While testing this feature's interaction with single-step mode, I (tgl) was led to conclude that SendQuery needs to recognize SIGINT (cancel_pressed) as a negative response to the single-step prompt. Perhaps that's a back-patchable bug fix, but for now I just included it here. Corey Huinker, reviewed by Jim Nasby, Daniel Vérité, and myself
2016-04-04Improve estimate of distinct values in estimate_num_groups().Dean Rasheed
When adjusting the estimate for the number of distinct values from a rel in a grouped query to take into account the selectivity of the rel's restrictions, use a formula that is less likely to produce under-estimates. The old formula simply multiplied the number of distinct values in the rel by the restriction selectivity, which would be correct if the restrictions were fully correlated with the grouping expressions, but can produce significant under-estimates in cases where they are not well correlated. The new formula is based on the random selection probability, and so assumes that the restrictions are not correlated with the grouping expressions. This is guaranteed to produce larger estimates, and of course risks over-estimating in cases where the restrictions are correlated, but that has less severe consequences than under-estimating, which might lead to a HashAgg that consumes an excessive amount of memory. This could possibly be improved upon in the future by identifying correlated restrictions and using a hybrid of the old and new formulae. Author: Tomas Vondra, with some hacking be me Reviewed-by: Mark Dilger, Alexander Korotkov, Dean Rasheed and Tom Lane Discussion: http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/[email protected]
2016-04-02Fix typo in pg_regress.cStephen Frost
s/afer/after Pointed out by Andreas 'ads' Scherbaum
2016-04-02Copyedit comments and documentation.Noah Misch
2016-04-01test_slot_timelines: Fix alternate expected outputAlvaro Herrera
2016-04-01Fix logical_decoding_timelines test crashesAlvaro Herrera
In the test_slot_timelines test module, we were abusing passing NULL values which was received as zeroes in x86, but this breaks in ARM (buildfarm member hamster) by crashing instead. Fix the breakage by marking these functions as STRICT; the InvalidXid value that was previously implicit in NULL values (on x86 at least) can now be passed as 0. Failing to follow the fmgr protocol to check for NULLs beforehand was causing ARM to fail, as evidenced by segmentation faults in buildfarm member hamster. In order to use the new functionality in the test script, use COALESCE in the right spot to avoid forwarding NULL values. This was diagnosed from the hamster crash by Craig Ringer, who also proposed a different patch (checking for NULL values explicitely in the C function code, and keeping the non-strictness in the C functions). I decided to go with this approach instead.
2016-04-01Type names should not be quotedAlvaro Herrera
Our actual convention, contrary to what I said in 59a2111b23f, is not to quote type names, as evidenced by unquoted use of format_type_be() result value in error messages. Remove quotes from recently tweaked messages accordingly. Per note from Tom Lane
2016-04-01Get rid of minus zero in box regression test.Tom Lane
Commit acdf2a8b added a test case involving minus zero as a box endpoint. This is not very portable, as evidenced by the several older buildfarm members that are failing on the test because they print minus zero as just "0". If there were any significant reason to test this behavior, we could consider carrying a separate expected-file; but it doesn't look to me like there's adequate justification to accept such a maintenance burden. Just change the test to use plain zero, instead.
2016-03-31Fix recovery_min_apply_delay testAlvaro Herrera
Previously this test was relying too much on WAL replay to occur in the exact configured interval, which was unreliable on slow or overly busy servers. Use a custom loop instead of poll_query_until, which is hopefully more reliable. Per continued failures on buildfarm member hamster (which is probably the only one running this test suite) Author: Michaël Paquier