Commit graph

568 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Peter Eisentraut
698bb4ec4f Translation updates 2011-12-01 22:59:40 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut
b43bb707cc Translation updates 2011-09-22 23:10:16 +03:00
Simon Riggs
d6c1dc176a Create new errcode for recovery conflict caused by db drop on master.
Previously reported as ERRCODE_ADMIN_SHUTDOWN, this case is now
reported as ERRCODE_DATABASE_DROPPED. No message text change.
Unlikely to happen on most servers, so low impact change to allow
session poolers to correctly handle this situation.

Tatsuo Ishii and Simon Riggs
2011-02-01 08:49:58 +00:00
Itagaki Takahiro
9a01285289 Fix wrong error reports in 'number of array dimensions exceeds the
maximum allowed' messages, that have reported one-less dimensions.

Alexey Klyukin
2011-02-01 15:23:55 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut
c8a154e3f8 Translation updates for release 9.0.2 2010-12-13 23:20:00 +02:00
Tom Lane
b11accc9a9 Improve plpgsql's error reporting for no-such-column cases.
Given a column reference foo.bar, where there is a composite plpgsql
variable foo but it doesn't contain a column bar, the pre-9.0 coding would
immediately throw a "record foo has no field bar" error.  In 9.0 the parser
hook instead falls through to let the core parser see if it can resolve the
reference.  If not, you get a complaint about "missing FROM-clause entry
for table foo", which while in some sense correct isn't terribly helpful.
Complicate things a bit so that we can throw the old error message if
neither the core parser nor the hook are able to resolve the column
reference, while not changing the behavior in any other case.
Per bug #5757 from Andrey Galkin.
2010-11-18 17:07:56 -05:00
Tom Lane
381d6a05ae Fix plpgsql's handling of "simple" expression evaluation.
In general, expression execution state trees aren't re-entrantly usable,
since functions can store private state information in them.
For efficiency reasons, plpgsql tries to cache and reuse state trees for
"simple" expressions.  It can get away with that most of the time, but it
can fail if the state tree is dirty from a previous failed execution (as
in an example from Alvaro) or is being used recursively (as noted by me).

Fix by tracking whether a state tree is in use, and falling back to the
"non-simple" code path if so.  This results in a pretty considerable speed
hit when the non-simple path is taken, but the available alternatives seem
even more unpleasant because they add overhead in the simple path.  Per
idea from Heikki.

Back-patch to all supported branches.
2010-10-28 13:02:33 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
9103b311a4 Translation updates for 9.0.1 2010-09-30 23:46:16 +03:00
Magnus Hagander
a692359411 Convert cvsignore to gitignore, and add .gitignore for build targets. 2010-09-22 12:57:06 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut
765b69ddb1 Translation updates for 9.0.0 2010-09-16 19:09:39 +00:00
Tom Lane
4a1989ffd5 Allow USING and INTO clauses of plpgsql's EXECUTE to appear in either order.
Aside from being more forgiving, this prevents a rather surprising misbehavior
when the "wrong" order was used: the old code didn't throw a syntax error,
but absorbed the INTO clause into the last USING expression, which then did
strange things downstream.

Intentionally not changing the documentation; we'll continue to advertise
only the "standard" clause order.

Backpatch to 8.4, where the USING clause was added to EXECUTE.
2010-08-19 18:58:04 +00:00
Tom Lane
f5c496b7f5 Keep exec_simple_check_plan() from thinking "SELECT foo INTO bar" is simple.
It's not clear if this situation can occur in plpgsql other than via the
EXECUTE USING case Heikki illustrated, which I will shortly close off.
However, ignoring the intoClause if it's there is surely wrong, so let's
patch it for safety.

Backpatch to 8.3, which is as far back as this code has a PlannedStmt
to deal with.  There might be another way to make an equivalent test
before that, but since this is just preventing hypothetical bugs,
I'm not going to obsess about it.
2010-08-19 18:10:56 +00:00
Tom Lane
3d7feba4b3 Be a bit less cavalier with both the code and the comment for UNKNOWN fix. 2010-08-19 17:31:50 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas
cc46c4e862 Revert patch to coerce 'unknown' type parameters in the backend. As Tom
pointed out, it would need a 2nd pass after the whole query is processed to
correctly check that an unknown Param is coerced to the same target type
everywhere. Adding the 2nd pass would add a lot more code, which doesn't
seem worth the risk given that there isn't much of a use case for passing
unknown Params in the first place. The code would work without that check,
but it might be confusing and the behavior would be different from the
varparams case.

Instead, just coerce all unknown params in a PL/pgSQL USING clause to text.
That's simple, and is usually what users expect.

Revert the patch in CVS HEAD and master, and backpatch the new solution to
8.4. Unlike the previous solution, this applies easily to 8.4 too.
2010-08-19 16:54:48 +00:00
Tom Lane
6d301d938f Fix incorrect logic in plpgsql for cleanup after evaluation of non-simple
expressions.  We need to deal with this when handling subscripts in an array
assignment, and also when catching an exception.  In an Assert-enabled build
these omissions led to Assert failures, but I think in a normal build the
only consequence would be short-term memory leakage; which may explain why
this wasn't reported from the field long ago.

Back-patch to all supported versions.  7.4 doesn't have exceptions, but
otherwise these bugs go all the way back.

Heikki Linnakangas and Tom Lane
2010-08-09 18:50:20 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut
a6c243ed9c Translation updates for 9.0beta4 2010-07-29 19:39:47 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut
0544c8cd57 Translation updates for 9.0beta3 2010-07-08 21:32:28 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
239d769e7e pgindent run for 9.0, second run 2010-07-06 19:19:02 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas
eb81b6509f The previous fix in CVS HEAD and 8.4 for handling the case where a cursor
being used in a PL/pgSQL FOR loop is closed was inadequate, as Tom Lane
pointed out. The bug affects FOR statement variants too, because you can
close an implicitly created cursor too by guessing the "<unnamed portal X>"
name created for it.

To fix that, "pin" the portal to prevent it from being dropped while it's
being used in a PL/pgSQL FOR loop. Backpatch all the way to 7.4 which is
the oldest supported version.
2010-07-05 09:27:18 +00:00
Tom Lane
399da7d882 Fix thinko in tok_is_keyword(): it was looking at the wrong union variant
of YYSTYPE, and hence returning the wrong answer for cases where a plpgsql
"unreserved keyword" really does conflict with a variable name.  Obviously
I didn't test this enough :-(.  Per bug #5524 from Peter Gagarinov.
2010-06-25 16:40:13 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas
2e8a832dd6 In a PL/pgSQL "FOR cursor" statement, the statements executed in the loop
might close the cursor,  rendering the Portal pointer to it invalid.
Closing the cursor in the middle of the loop is not a very sensible thing
to do, but we must handle it gracefully and throw an error instead of
crashing.
2010-06-21 09:47:29 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut
1eca1b7a68 Translation updates for 9.0beta2 2010-06-03 21:12:05 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
763129e04f Add error hint that PL/pgSQL "EXECUTE of SELECT ... INTO" can be
performed by "EXECUTE ... INTO".

Jaime Casanova
2010-05-31 20:02:30 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut
f1ac08daee Translation update 2010-05-13 15:56:43 +00:00
Tom Lane
f7c5ff3d6d Fix plpgsql's exec_eval_expr() to ensure it returns a sane type OID
even when the expression is a query that returns no rows.

So far as I can tell, the only caller that actually fails when a garbage
OID is returned is exec_stmt_case(), which is new in 8.4 --- in all other
cases, we might make a useless trip through casting logic, but we won't
fail since the isnull flag will be set.  Hence, backpatch only to 8.4,
just in case there are apps out there that aren't expecting an error to
be thrown if the query returns more or less than one column.  (Which seems
unlikely, since the error would be thrown if the query ever did return a
row; but it's possible there's some never-exercised code out there.)

Per report from Mario Splivalo.
2010-04-14 23:52:10 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
a6c1cea2b7 Add libpq warning message if the .pgpass-retrieved password fails.
Add ERRCODE_INVALID_PASSWORD sqlstate error code.
2010-03-13 14:55:57 +00:00
Tom Lane
77e0d7b3eb Instead of trying (and failing) to allow <<label>> at the end of a DECLARE
section, throw an error message saying explicitly that the label must go
before DECLARE.  Per investigation of a recent pgsql-novice question,
this code did not work as intended in any modern PG version, maybe not ever.
Allowing such a thing would only create ambiguity anyway, so it seems better
to remove it than fix it.
2010-03-03 01:53:17 +00:00
Tom Lane
e664969f0f Cause plpgsql to throw an error if "INTO rowtype_var" is followed by a comma.
Per bug #5352, this helps to provide a useful error message if the user
tries to do something presently unsupported, namely use a rowtype variable
as a member of a multiple-item INTO list.
2010-03-02 16:14:39 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
65e806cba1 pgindent run for 9.0 2010-02-26 02:01:40 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut
a39f02e369 Translation updates for 9.0alpha4 2010-02-19 00:40:05 +00:00
Tom Lane
711804fddd Prevent #option dump from crashing on FORI statement with null step. Reported by Pavel. 2010-02-17 01:48:45 +00:00
Robert Haas
e26c539e9f Wrap calls to SearchSysCache and related functions using macros.
The purpose of this change is to eliminate the need for every caller
of SearchSysCache, SearchSysCacheCopy, SearchSysCacheExists,
GetSysCacheOid, and SearchSysCacheList to know the maximum number
of allowable keys for a syscache entry (currently 4).  This will
make it far easier to increase the maximum number of keys in a
future release should we choose to do so, and it makes the code
shorter, too.

Design and review by Tom Lane.
2010-02-14 18:42:19 +00:00
Tom Lane
3ad7dbb1b9 Don't choke when exec_move_row assigns a synthesized null to a column
that happens to be composite itself.  Per bug #5314 from Oleg Serov.

Backpatch to 8.0 --- 7.4 has got too many other shortcomings in
composite-type support to make this worth worrying about in that branch.
2010-02-12 19:37:36 +00:00
Tom Lane
309cd7cf18 Add "USING expressions" option to plpgsql's OPEN cursor FOR EXECUTE.
This is the last EXECUTE-like plpgsql statement that was missing
the capability of inserting parameter values via USING.

Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Itagaki Takahiro
2010-01-19 01:35:31 +00:00
Tom Lane
2d7f136ff7 Improve plpgsql parsing to report "foo is not a known variable", rather than a
generic syntax error, when seeing "foo := something" and foo isn't recognized.
This buys back most of the helpfulness discarded in my previous patch by not
throwing errors when a qualified name appears to match a row variable but the
last component doesn't match any field of the row.  It covers other cases
where our error messages left something to be desired, too.
2010-01-10 17:56:50 +00:00
Tom Lane
01f7d29902 Improve plpgsql's handling of record field references by forcing all potential
field references in SQL expressions to have RECFIELD datum-array entries at
parse time.  If it turns out that the reference is actually to a SQL column,
the RECFIELD entry is useless, but it costs little.  This allows us to get rid
of the previous use of FieldSelect applied to a whole-row Param for the record
variable; which was not only slower than a direct RECFIELD reference, but
failed for references to system columns of a trigger's NEW or OLD record.
Per report and fix suggestion from Dean Rasheed.
2010-01-10 17:15:18 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
0239800893 Update copyright for the year 2010. 2010-01-02 16:58:17 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas
84d723b6ce Previous fix for temporary file management broke returning a set from
PL/pgSQL function within an exception handler. Make sure we use the right
resource owner when we create the tuplestore to hold returned tuples.

Simplify tuplestore API so that the caller doesn't need to be in the right
memory context when calling tuplestore_put* functions. tuplestore.c
automatically switches to the memory context used when the tuplestore was
created. Tuplesort was already modified like this earlier. This patch also
removes the now useless MemoryContextSwitch calls from callers.

Report by Aleksei on pgsql-bugs on Dec 22 2009. Backpatch to 8.1, like
the previous patch that broke this.
2009-12-29 17:40:59 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut
baab7a0427 Translation updates 2009-12-19 20:23:26 +00:00
Tom Lane
0cb65564e5 Add exclusion constraints, which generalize the concept of uniqueness to
support any indexable commutative operator, not just equality.  Two rows
violate the exclusion constraint if "row1.col OP row2.col" is TRUE for
each of the columns in the constraint.

Jeff Davis, reviewed by Robert Haas
2009-12-07 05:22:23 +00:00
Tom Lane
6317609986 Add control knobs for plpgsql's variable resolution behavior, and make the
default be "throw error on conflict", as per discussions.  The GUC variable
is plpgsql.variable_conflict, with values "error", "use_variable",
"use_column".  The behavior can also be specified per-function by inserting
one of
	#variable_conflict error
	#variable_conflict use_variable
	#variable_conflict use_column
at the start of the function body.

The 8.5 release notes will need to mention using "use_variable" to retain
backward-compatible behavior, although we should encourage people to migrate
to the much less mistake-prone "error" setting.

Update the plpgsql documentation to match this and other recent changes.
2009-11-13 22:43:42 +00:00
Tom Lane
2dee828cac Remove plpgsql's separate lexer (finally!), in favor of using the core lexer
directly.  This was a lot of trouble, but should be worth it in terms of
not having to keep the plpgsql lexer in step with core anymore.  In addition
the handling of keywords is significantly better-structured, allowing us to
de-reserve a number of words that plpgsql formerly treated as reserved.
2009-11-12 00:13:00 +00:00
Tom Lane
73a2f6c653 More incremental refactoring in plpgsql: get rid of gram.y dependencies on
yytext.  This is a necessary change if we're going to have a lexer interface
layer that does lookahead, since yytext won't necessarily be in step with
what the grammar thinks is the current token.  yylval and yylloc should
be the only side-variables that we need to manage when doing lookahead.
2009-11-10 02:13:13 +00:00
Tom Lane
39bd3fd1db Modernize plpgsql's handling of parse locations, making it look a lot more
like the core parser's code.  In particular, track locations at the character
rather than line level during parsing, allowing many more parse-time error
conditions to be reported with precise error pointers rather than just
"near line N".

Also, exploit the fact that we no longer need to substitute $N for variable
references by making extracted SQL queries and expressions be exact copies
of subranges of the function text, rather than having random whitespace
changes within them.  This makes it possible to directly map parse error
positions from the core parser onto positions in the function text, which
lets us report them without the previous kluge of showing the intermediate
internal-query form.  (Later it might be good to do that for core
parse-analysis errors too, but this patch is just touching plpgsql's
lexer/parser, not what happens at runtime.)

In passing, make plpgsql's lexer use palloc not malloc.

These changes make plpgsql's parse-time error reports noticeably nicer
(as illustrated by the regression test changes), and will also simplify
the planned removal of plpgsql's separate lexer by reducing the impedance
mismatch between what it does and what the core lexer does.
2009-11-09 00:26:55 +00:00
Tom Lane
fb60af4127 Remove ancient text file containing plpgsql installation instructions.
This was long ago superseded by the standard build process and main
SGML documentation.
2009-11-07 17:21:34 +00:00
Tom Lane
f2b7692e75 Rearrange plpgsql parsing to simplify and speed it up a bit.
* Pull the responsibility for %TYPE and %ROWTYPE out of the scanner,
letting read_datatype manage it instead.

* Avoid unnecessary scanner-driven lookups of plpgsql variables in
places where it's not needed, which is actually most of the time;
we do not need it in DECLARE sections nor in text that is a SQL
query or expression.

* Rationalize the set of token types returned by the scanner:
distinguishing T_SCALAR, T_RECORD, T_ROW seems to complicate the grammar
in more places than it simplifies it, so merge these into one
token type T_DATUM; but split T_ERROR into T_DBLWORD and T_TRIPWORD
for clarity and simplicity of later processing.

Some of this will need to be revisited again when we try to make
plpgsql use the core scanner, but this patch gets some of the bigger
stumbling blocks out of the way.
2009-11-07 00:52:26 +00:00
Tom Lane
0772f1e53d Change plpgsql from using textual substitution to insert variable references
into SQL expressions, to using the newly added parser callback hooks.

This allows us to do the substitutions in a more semantically-aware way:
a variable reference will only be recognized where it can validly go,
ie, a place where a column value or parameter would be legal, instead of
the former behavior that would replace any textual match including
table names and column aliases (leading to syntax errors later on).
A release-note-worthy fine point is that plpgsql variable names that match
fully-reserved words will now need to be quoted.

This commit preserves the former behavior that variable references take
precedence over any possible match to a column name.  The infrastructure
is in place to support the reverse precedence or throwing an error on
ambiguity, but those behaviors aren't accessible yet.

Most of the code changes here are associated with making the namespace
data structure persist so that it can be consulted at runtime, instead
of throwing it away at the end of initial function parsing.

The plpgsql scanner is still doing name lookups, but that behavior is
now irrelevant for SQL expressions.  A future commit will deal with
removing unnecessary lookups.
2009-11-06 18:37:55 +00:00
Tom Lane
c29ae527e9 Remove plpgsql's RENAME declaration, which has bizarre and mostly nonfunctional
behavior, and is so little used that no one has been interested in fixing it.
To ensure that possible uses are covered, remove the ALIAS declaration's
arbitrary restriction that only $n identifiers can be aliased.

(We could alternatively make RENAME act just like ALIAS, but per discussion
having two different ways to do the same thing is probably more confusing than
helpful.)
2009-11-05 16:58:36 +00:00
Tom Lane
9bedd128d6 Add support for invoking parser callback hooks via SPI and in cached plans.
As proof of concept, modify plpgsql to use the hooks.  plpgsql is still
inserting $n symbols textually, but the "back end" of the parsing process now
goes through the ParamRef hook instead of using a fixed parameter-type array,
and then execution only fetches actually-referenced parameters, using a hook
added to ParamListInfo.

Although there's a lot left to be done in plpgsql, this already cures the
"if (TG_OP = 'INSERT' and NEW.foo ...)"  problem, as illustrated by the
changed regression test.
2009-11-04 22:26:08 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut
ef8df75e67 Translations update for 8.5alpha2 2009-10-20 18:23:27 +00:00