This affects two command patterns, showing information about relations:
* oid2name -x -d DBNAME, applying to all relations on a database.
* oid2name -x -d DBNAME -t TABNAME [-t ..], applying to a subset of
defined relations on a database.
The relative path of a relation is added to the information provided,
using pg_relation_filepath().
Author: David Bidoc <dcbidoc@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Laurenz Albe <laurenz.albe@cybertec.at>
Reviewed-by: Guillaume Lelarge <guillaume.lelarge@dalibo.com>
Reviewed-by: Euler Taveira <euler@eulerto.com>
Reviewed-by: Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CABour1v2CU1wjjoM86wAFyezJQ3-+ncH43zY1f1uXeVojVN8Ow@mail.gmail.com
Mostly this involves checking for NULL pointer before doing operations
that add a non-zero offset.
The exception is an overflow warning in heap_fetch_toast_slice(). This
was caused by unneeded parentheses forcing an expression to be
evaluated to a negative integer, which then got cast to size_t.
Per clang 21 undefined behavior sanitizer.
Backpatch to all supported versions.
Co-authored-by: Alexander Lakhin <exclusion@gmail.com>
Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin <exclusion@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/777bd201-6e3a-4da0-a922-4ea9de46a3ee@gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 14
The test relies on VACUUM being able to mark a page all-visible, but
this can fail when autovacuum in other sessions prevents the visibility
horizon from advancing. Making the test table temporary isolates its
horizon from other sessions, including catalog table vacuums, ensuring
reliable test behavior.
Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin <exclusion@gmail.com>
Author: Kirill Reshke <reshkekirill@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Melanie Plageman <melanieplageman@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2b09fba6-6b71-497a-96ef-a6947fcc39f6%40gmail.com
Separate att_align_nominal() into two macros, similarly to what
was already done with att_align_datum() and att_align_pointer().
The inner macro att_nominal_alignby() is really just TYPEALIGN(),
while att_align_nominal() retains its previous API by mapping
TYPALIGN_xxx values to numbers of bytes to align to and then
calling att_nominal_alignby(). In support of this, split out
tupdesc.c's logic to do that mapping into a publicly visible
function typalign_to_alignby().
Having done that, we can replace performance-critical uses of
att_align_nominal() with att_nominal_alignby(), where the
typalign_to_alignby() mapping is done just once outside the loop.
In most places I settled for doing typalign_to_alignby() once
per function. We could in many places pass the alignby value
in from the caller if we wanted to change function APIs for this
purpose; but I'm a bit loath to do that, especially for exported
APIs that extensions might call. Replacing a char typalign
argument by a uint8 typalignby argument would be an API change
that compilers would fail to warn about, thus silently breaking
code in hard-to-debug ways. I did revise the APIs of array_iter_setup
and array_iter_next, moving the element type attribute arguments to
the former; if any external code uses those, the argument-count
change will cause visible compile failures.
Performance testing shows that ExecEvalScalarArrayOp is sped up by
about 10% by this change, when using a simple per-element function
such as int8eq. I did not check any of the other loops optimized
here, but it's reasonable to expect similar gains.
Although the motivation for creating this patch was to avoid a
performance loss if we add some more typalign values, it evidently
is worth doing whether that patch lands or not.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1127261.1769649624@sss.pgh.pa.us
The replication origin code was using inconsistent naming
conventions. Functions were typically prefixed with 'replorigin',
while typedefs and constants used "RepOrigin".
This commit unifies the naming convention by renaming RepOriginId to
ReplOriginId.
Reviewed-by: Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoBDgm3hDqUZ+nqu=ViHmkCnJBuJyaxG_yvv27BAi2zBmQ@mail.gmail.com
We've assumed that touching the memory is sufficient for a page to be
located on one of the NUMA nodes. But a page may be moved to a swap
after we touch it, due to memory pressure.
We touch the memory before querying the status, but there is no
guarantee it won't be moved to the swap in the meantime. The touching
happens only on the first call, so later calls are more likely to be
affected. And the batching increases the window too.
It's up to the kernel if/when pages get moved to swap. We have to accept
ENOENT (-2) as a valid result, and handle it without failing. This patch
simply treats it as an unknown node, and returns NULL in the two
affected views (pg_shmem_allocations_numa and pg_buffercache_numa).
Hugepages cannot be swapped out, so this affects only regular pages.
Reported by Christoph Berg, investigation and fix by me. Backpatch to
18, where the two views were introduced.
Reported-by: Christoph Berg <myon@debian.org>
Discussion: 18
Backpatch-through: https://postgr.es/m/aTq5Gt_n-oS_QSpL@msg.df7cb.de
lazy_scan_prune() previously had two separate cases that called
visibilitymap_set() after pruning and freezing. These branches were
nearly identical except that one attempted to avoid dirtying the heap
buffer. However, that situation can never occur — the heap buffer cannot
be clean at that point (and we would hit an assertion if it were).
In lazy_scan_prune(), when we change a previously all-visible page to
all-frozen and the page was recorded as all-visible in the visibility
map by find_next_unskippable_block(), the heap buffer will always be
dirty. Either we have just frozen a tuple and already dirtied the
buffer, or the buffer was modified between find_next_unskippable_block()
and heap_page_prune_and_freeze() and then pruned in
heap_page_prune_and_freeze().
Additionally, XLogRegisterBuffer() asserts that the buffer is dirty, so
attempting to add a clean heap buffer to the WAL chain would assert out
anyway.
Since the “clean heap buffer with already set VM” case is impossible,
the two visibilitymap_set() branches in lazy_scan_prune() can be merged.
Doing so makes the intent clearer and emphasizes that the heap buffer
must always be marked dirty before being added to the WAL chain.
This commit also adds a test case for vacuuming when no heap
modifications are required. Currently this ensures that the heap buffer
is marked dirty before it is added to the WAL chain, but if we later
remove the heap buffer from the VM-set WAL chain or pass it with the
REGBUF_NO_CHANGES flag, this test would guard that behavior.
Author: Melanie Plageman <melanieplageman@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-by: Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Srinath Reddy Sadipiralla <srinath2133@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kirill Reshke <reshkekirill@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Xuneng Zhou <xunengzhou@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Andrey Borodin <x4mmm@yandex-team.ru>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5CEAA162-67B1-44DA-B60D-8B65717E8B05%40gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/flat/CAAKRu_ZWx5gCbeCf7PWCv8p5%3D%3Db7EEws0VD2wksDxpXCvCyHvQ%40mail.gmail.com
This fixes cases where a qualifier (const, in all cases here) was
dropped by a cast, but the cast was otherwise necessary or desirable,
so the straightforward fix is to add the qualifier into the cast.
Co-authored-by: Bertrand Drouvot <bertranddrouvot.pg@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/b04f4d3a-5e70-4e73-9ef2-87f777ca4aac%40eisentraut.org
Builds with CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS enabled are failing the new test
introduced in 1572ea96e6, checking the nesting level calculation in
the planner hook. The inner query of the function called twice is
registered as normalized, as such builds would register a PGSS entry in
the post-parse-analyse hook due to the cached plans requiring
revalidation.
A trick based on debug_discard_caches cannot work as far as I can, a
normalized query still being registered. This commit takes a different
approach with the addition of a DISCARD PLANS before the first function
call. This forces the use of a normalized query in the PGSS entry for
the inner query of the function with and without CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS,
which should be enough to stabilize the test. Note that the test is
still checking what it should: when removing the nesting level
calculation in the planner hook of PGSS, one still gets a failure for
the PGSS entry of the inner query in the function, with "toplevel" being
flipped to true instead of false (it should be false, as a non-top-level
entry).
Per buildfarm members avocet and trilobite, at least.
Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin <exclusion@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/82dd02bb-4e0f-40ad-a60b-baa1763ff0bd@gmail.com
ExecInitModifyTable() unconditionally required a ctid junk column even
when the target was a partitioned table. This led to spurious "could
not find junk ctid column" errors when all children were excluded and
only the dummy root result relation remained.
A partitioned table only appears in the result relations list when all
leaf partitions have been pruned, leaving the dummy root as the sole
entry. Assert this invariant (nrels == 1) and skip the ctid requirement.
Also adjust ExecModifyTable() to tolerate invalid ri_RowIdAttNo for
partitioned tables, which is safe since no rows will be processed in
this case.
Bug: #19099
Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin <exclusion@gmail.com>
Author: Amit Langote <amitlangote09@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tender Wang <tndrwang@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kirill Reshke <reshkekirill@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/19099-e05dcfa022fe553d%40postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 14
There were many PG_GETARG_* calls, mostly around gin, gist, spgist
code, that were commented out, presumably to indicate that the
argument was unused and to indicate that it wasn't forgotten or
miscounted. But keeping commented-out code updated with refactorings
and style changes is annoying. So this commit changes them to
#ifdef NOT_USED
blocks, which is a style already in use. That way, at least the
indentation and syntax highlighting works correctly, making some of
these blocks much easier to read.
An alternative would be to just delete that code, but there is some
value in making unused arguments explicit, and some of this arguably
serves as example code for index AM APIs.
Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi>
Reviewed-by: David Geier <geidav.pg@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/328e4371-9a4c-4196-9df9-1f23afc900df%40eisentraut.org
Commit bc2f348 introduced multi-line HEADER support for COPY. This commit
extends this capability to file_fdw, allowing multiple header lines to be
skipped.
Because CREATE/ALTER FOREIGN TABLE requires option values to be single-quoted,
this commit also updates defGetCopyHeaderOption() to accept integer values
specified as strings for HEADER option.
Author: Shinya Kato <shinya11.kato@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: songjinzhou <tsinghualucky912@foxmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Japin Li <japinli@hotmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAOzEurT+iwC47VHPMS+uJ4WSzvOLPsZ2F2_wopm8M7O+CZa3Xw@mail.gmail.com
Continuing to support this backwards-compatibility feature has
nontrivial costs; in particular it is potentially a security hazard
if an application somehow gets confused about which setting the
server is using. We changed the default to ON fifteen years ago,
which seems like enough time for applications to have adapted.
Let's remove support for the legacy string syntax.
We should not remove the GUC altogether, since client-side code will
still test it, pg_dump scripts will attempt to set it to ON, etc.
Instead, just prevent it from being set to OFF. There is precedent
for this approach (see commit de66987ad).
This patch does remove the related GUC escape_string_warning, however.
That setting does nothing when standard_conforming_strings is on,
so it's now useless. We could leave it in place as a do-nothing
setting to avoid breaking clients that still set it, if there are any.
But it seems likely that any such client is also trying to turn off
standard_conforming_strings, so it'll need work anyway.
The client-side changes in this patch are pretty minimal, because even
though we are dropping the server's support, most of our clients still
need to be able to talk to older server versions. We could remove
dead client code only once we disclaim compatibility with pre-v19
servers, which is surely years away. One change of note is that
pg_dump/pg_dumpall now set standard_conforming_strings = on in their
source session, rather than accepting the source server's default.
This ensures that literals in view definitions and such will be
printed in a way that's acceptable to v19+. In particular,
pg_upgrade will work transparently even if the source installation has
standard_conforming_strings = off. (However, pg_restore will behave
the same as before if given an archive file containing
standard_conforming_strings = off. Such an archive will not be safely
restorable into v19+, but we shouldn't break the ability to extract
valid data from it for use with an older server.)
Author: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3279216.1767072538@sss.pgh.pa.us
We were using SnapshotAny to do some index checks, but that's wrong and
causes spurious errors when used on indexes created by CREATE INDEX
CONCURRENTLY. Fix it to use an MVCC snapshot, and add a test for it.
Backpatch of 6bd469d26a to branches 14-16. I previously misidentified
the bug's origin: it came in with commit 7f563c09f8 (pg11-era, not
5ae2087202 as claimed previously), so all live branches are affected.
Also take the opportunity to fix some comments that we failed to update
in the original commits and apply pgperltidy. In branch 14, remove the
unnecessary test plan specification (which would have need to have been
changed anyway; c.f. commit 549ec201d613.)
Diagnosed-by: Donghang Lin <donghanglin@gmail.com>
Author: Mihail Nikalayeu <mihailnikalayeu@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Andrey Borodin <x4mmm@yandex-team.ru>
Backpatch-through: 17
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CANtu0ojmVd27fEhfpST7RG2KZvwkX=dMyKUqg0KM87FkOSdz8Q@mail.gmail.com
This commit adds tests to verify the computation of the nesting level
for two code paths: the planner hook and the ExecutorFinish() hook. The
nesting level is essential to save a correct "toplevel" status for the
added PGSS entries.
The author has noticed that removing the manipulations of nesting_level
in these two code paths did not cause the tests to complain, meaning
that we never had coverage for the assumptions taken by the code.
Author: Sami Imseih <samimseih@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA5RZ0uK1PSrgf52bWCtDpzaqbWt04o6ZA7zBm6UQyv7vyvf9w@mail.gmail.com
The test "squashing" was the last item of the REGRESS list, but
"cleanup" should be the second to last, dropping the extension.
"oldextversions" is the last item.
In passing, the REGRESS list is cleaned up to include one item per line,
so as diffs are minimized when adding new test files.
Noticed while playing with this area of the code.
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@kurilemu.de>
Reviewed-by: Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Man Zeng <zengman@halodbtech.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/aW6_Xc8auuu5iAPi@paquier.xyz
When IN/ANY clauses contain both constants and variable expressions, the
optimizer transforms them into separate structures: constants become
an array expression while variables become individual OR conditions.
This transformation was creating an overlap with the token locations,
causing pg_stat_statements query normalization to crash because it
could not calculate the amount of bytes remaining to write for the
normalized query.
This commit disables squashing for mixed IN list expressions when
constructing a scalar array op, by setting list_start and list_end
to -1 when both variables and non-variables are present. Some
regression tests are added to PGSS to verify these patterns.
Author: Sami Imseih <samimseih@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Dolgov <9erthalion6@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA5RZ0ts9qiONnHjjHxPxtePs22GBo4d3jZ_s2BQC59AN7XbAA@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 18
This is motivated by wanting to merge buffer content locks into
BufferDesc.state in a future commit, rather than having a separate lwlock (see
commit c75ebc657f for more details). As this change is rather mechanical, it
seems to make sense to split it out into a separate commit, for easier review.
Reviewed-by: Melanie Plageman <melanieplageman@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/fvfmkr5kk4nyex56ejgxj3uzi63isfxovp2biecb4bspbjrze7@az2pljabhnff
Liujinyang reported the one in binaryheap.c, I then found and analyzed
the rest.
For future patches, we require git archaelogical analysis before we
accept patches of this nature.
Co-authored-by: liujinyang <21043272@qq.com>
Co-authored-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@kurilemu.de>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/tencent_6B302BFCAF6F010E00AB5C2C0ECB7AA3F205@qq.com
This patch switches some code paths to use GetDatum() macros more in
line with the data types of the variables they manipulate. This set of
changes does not fix a problem, but it is always nice to be more
consistent across the board.
Author: Kirill Reshke <reshkekirill@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Roman Khapov <rkhapov@yandex-team.ru>
Reviewed-by: Yuan Li <carol.li2025@outlook.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Reviewed-by: Man Zeng <zengman@halodbtech.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALdSSPidtC7j3MwhkqRj0K2hyp36ztnnjSt6qzGxQtiePR1dzw@mail.gmail.com
Commit 5b148706c5 exposed functionality that allows multiple processes to
use the same replication origin, enabling non-builtin logical replication
solutions to implement parallel apply for large transactions.
With this functionality, if two backends acquire the same replication
origin and one of them resets it first, the acquired_by flag is cleared
without acknowledging that another backend is still actively using the
origin. This can lead to the origin being unintentionally dropped. If the
shared memory for that dropped origin is later reused for a newly created
origin, the remaining backend that still holds a pointer to the old memory
may inadvertently advance the LSN of a completely different origin,
causing unpredictable behavior.
Although the underlying issue predates commit 5b148706c5, it did not
surface earlier because the internal parallel apply worker mechanism
correctly coordinated origin resets and drops.
This commit resolves the problem by introducing a reference counter for
replication origins. The reference count increases when a backend sets the
origin and decreases when it resets it. Additionally, the backend that
first acquires the origin will not release it until all other backends
using the origin have released it as well.
The patch also prevents dropping a replication origin when acquired_by is
zero but the reference counter is nonzero, covering the scenario where the
first session exits without properly releasing the origin.
Author: Hou Zhijie <houzj.fnst@fujitsu.com>
Author: Hayato Kuroda <kuroda.hayato@fujitsu.com>
Reviewed-by: Shveta Malik <shveta.malik@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/TY4PR01MB169077EE72ABE9E55BAF162D494B5A@TY4PR01MB16907.jpnprd01.prod.outlook.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMPB6wfe4zLjJL8jiZV5kjjpwBM2=rTRme0UCL7Ra4L8MTVdOg@mail.gmail.com
RangeTblEntry.groupexprs was marked with the node attribute
query_jumble_ignore, causing a list of GROUP BY expressions to be
ignored during the query jumbling. For example, these two queries could
be grouped together within the same query ID:
SELECT count(*) FROM t GROUP BY a;
SELECT count(*) FROM t GROUP BY b;
However, as such queries use different GROUP BY clauses, they should be
split across multiple entries.
This fixes an oversight in 247dea89f7, that has introduced an RTE for
GROUP BY clauses. Query IDs are documented as being stable across minor
releases, but as this is a regression new to v18 and that we are still
early in its support cycle, a backpatch is exceptionally done as this
has broken a behavior that exists since query jumbling is supported in
core, since its introduction in pg_stat_statements.
The tests of pg_stat_statements are expanded to cover this area, with
patterns involving GROUP BY and GROUPING clauses.
Author: Jian He <jian.universality@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CACJufxEy2W+tCqC7XuJ94r3ivWsM=onKJp94kRFx3hoARjBeFQ@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 18
Doing this meant that those two headers, which are supposed to be
internal to their corresponding index AMs, were being included pretty
much universally, because tuplesort.h is included by execnodes.h which
is very widely used. Stop that, and fix fallout.
We also change indexing.h to no longer include execnodes.h (tuptable.h
is sufficient), and relscan.h to no longer include buf.h (pointless
since c2fe139c20).
Author: Mario González <gonzalemario@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFsReFUcBFup=Ohv_xd7SNQ=e73TXi8YNEkTsFEE2BW7jS1noQ@mail.gmail.com
Some structs and enums related to parallel query instrumentation had
organically grown scattered across various files, and were causing
header pollution especially through execnodes.h. Create a single file
where they can live together.
This only moves the structs to the new file; cleaning up the pollution
by removing no-longer-necessary cross-header inclusion will be done in
future commits.
Co-authored-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@kurilemu.de>
Co-authored-by: Mario González <gonzalemario@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/202510051642.wwmn4mj77wch@alvherre.pgsql
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFsReFUr4KrQ60z+ck9cRM4WuUw1TCghN7EFwvV0KvuncTRc2w@mail.gmail.com
The dmetaphone() SQL function internally upper-cases the argument
string. It did this using the toupper() function. That way, it has a
dependency on the global LC_CTYPE locale setting, which we want to get
rid of.
The "double metaphone" algorithm specifically supports the "C with
cedilla" letter, so just using ASCII case conversion wouldn't work.
To fix that, use the passed-in collation and use the str_toupper()
function, which has full awareness of collations and collation
providers.
Note that this does not change the fact that this function only works
correctly with single-byte encodings. The change to str_toupper()
makes the case conversion multibyte-enabled, but the rest of the
function is still not ready.
Reviewed-by: Jeff Davis <pgsql@j-davis.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/108e07a2-0632-4f00-984d-fe0e0d0ec726%40eisentraut.org
Previously the instrumentation logic always converted to seconds, only for
many of the callers to do unnecessary division to get to milliseconds. As an
upcoming refactoring will split the Instrumentation struct, utilize instrtime
always to keep things simpler. It's also a bit faster to not have to first
convert to a double in functions like InstrEndLoop(), InstrAggNode().
Author: Lukas Fittl <lukas@fittl.com>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAP53PkzZ3UotnRrrnXWAv=F4avRq9MQ8zU+bxoN9tpovEu6fGQ@mail.gmail.com
In the wake of the previous commit, this script will fail
if executed via CREATE EXTENSION, so it's useless. Remove it,
but keep the delta scripts, allowing old (even very old)
versions of the btree_gist SQL objects to be upgraded to 1.9
via ALTER EXTENSION UPDATE after a pg_upgrade.
Author: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Reviewed-by: Matthias van de Meent <boekewurm+postgres@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2483812.1754072263@sss.pgh.pa.us
btree_gist's gist_inet_ops and gist_cidr_ops opclasses are
fundamentally broken: they rely on an approximate representation of
the inet values and hence sometimes miss rows they should return.
We want to eventually get rid of them altogether, but as the first
step on that journey, we should mark them not-opcdefault.
To do that, roll up the preceding deltas since 1.2 into a new base
script btree_gist--1.9.sql. This will allow installing 1.9 without
going through a transient situation where gist_inet_ops and
gist_cidr_ops are marked as opcdefault; trying to create them that
way will fail if there's already a matching default opclass in the
core system. Additionally provide btree_gist--1.8--1.9.sql, so
that a database that's been pg_upgraded from an older version can
be migrated to 1.9.
I noted along the way that commit 57e3c5160 had missed marking the
gist_bool_ops support functions as PARALLEL SAFE. While that probably
has little harmful effect (since AFAIK we don't check that when
calling index support functions), this seems like a good time to make
things consistent.
Readers will also note that I removed the former habit of installing
some opclass operators/functions with ALTER OPERATOR FAMILY, instead
just rolling them all into the CREATE OPERATOR CLASS steps. The
comment in btree_gist--1.2.sql that it's necessary to use ALTER for
pg_upgrade reproducibility has been obsolete since we invented the
amadjustmembers infrastructure. Nowadays, gistadjustmembers will
force all operators and non-required support functions to have "soft"
opfamily dependencies, regardless of whether they are installed by
CREATE or ALTER.
Author: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Reviewed-by: Matthias van de Meent <boekewurm+postgres@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2483812.1754072263@sss.pgh.pa.us
All the code paths updated here have been using index_close() to
close a relation that was opened with relation_open(), in pgstattuple
and pageinspect. index_close() does the same thing as relation_close(),
so there is no harm, but being inconsistent could lead to issues if the
internals of these close() functions begin to introduce some specific
logic in the future.
In passing, this commit adds some comments explaining why we are using
relation_open() instead of index_open() in a few places, which is due to
the fact that partitioned indexes are not allowed in these functions.
Author: Bertrand Drouvot <bertranddrouvot.pg@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Japin Li <japinli@hotmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/aUKamYGiDKO6byp5@ip-10-97-1-34.eu-west-3.compute.internal
This change is a cocktail of harmonization of function argument names,
grammar typos, renames for better consistency and unused code (see
ltree). All of these have been spotted by the author.
Author: Alexander Lakhin <exclusion@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/b2c0d0b7-3944-487d-a03d-d155851958ff@gmail.com
This fixes a poorly written integer comparison function which was
performing subtraction in an attempt to return a negative value when
a < b and a positive value when a > b, and 0 when the values were equal.
Unfortunately that didn't always work correctly due to two's complement
having the INT_MIN 1 further from zero than INT_MAX. This could result
in an overflow and cause the comparison function to return an incorrect
result, which would result in the binary search failing to find the
value being searched for.
This could cause poor selectivity estimates when the statistics stored
the value of INT_MAX (2147483647) and the value being searched for was
large enough to result in the binary search doing a comparison with that
INT_MAX value.
Author: Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: David Rowley <dgrowleyml@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEoWx2ng1Ot5LoKbVU-Dh---dFTUZWJRH8wv2chBu29fnNDMaQ@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 14
Up to now, index amhandlers were expected to produce a new, palloc'd
struct on each call. That requires palloc/pfree overhead, and creates
a risk of memory leaks if the caller fails to pfree, and the time
taken to fill such a large structure isn't nil. Moreover, we were
storing these things in the relcache, eating several hundred bytes for
each cached index. There is not anything in these structs that needs
to vary at runtime, so let's change the definition so that an
amhandler can return a pointer to a "static const" struct of which
there's only one copy per index AM. Mark all the core code's
IndexAmRoutine pointers const so that we catch anyplace that might
still try to change or pfree one.
(This is similar to the way we were already handling TableAmRoutine
structs. This commit does fix one comment that was infelicitously
copied-and-pasted into tableamapi.c.)
This commit needs to be called out in the v19 release notes as an API
change for extension index AMs. An un-updated AM will still work
(as of now, anyway) but it risks memory leaks and will be slower than
necessary.
Author: Matthias van de Meent <boekewurm+postgres@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEoWx2=vApYk2LRu8R0DdahsPNEhWUxGBZ=rbZo1EXE=uA+opQ@mail.gmail.com
This patch causes one postgres_fdw test case to revert to the plan
it used before aa86129e1, i.e., using a remote sort in preference to
local sort. That decision is actually a coin-flip because cost_sort()
will give the same answer on both sides, so that the plan choice comes
down to little more than roundoff error. In consequence, the test
output can change as a result of even minor changes in nearby costs,
as we saw in aa86129e1 (compare also b690e5fac and 4b14e1871).
b690e5fac's solution to stabilizing the adjacent test case was to
disable sorting locally, and here we extend that to the currently-
problematic case. Without this, the following patch would cause this
plan choice to change back in this same way, for even less apparent
reason.
Author: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Reviewed-by: Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2551253.1766952956@sss.pgh.pa.us
This change makes more readable code diffs when adding new items or
removing old items, while ensuring that lines do not get excessively
long. Some SUBDIRS, PROGRAMS and REGRESS lists are split.
Note that there are a few more REGRESS lists that could be split,
particularly in contrib/.
Author: Jelte Fennema-Nio <postgres@jeltef.nl>
Co-Authored-By: Jacob Champion <jacob.champion@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Japin Li <japinli@hotmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Man Zeng <zengman@halodbtech.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/DF6HDGB559U5.3MPRFCWPONEAE@jeltef.nl
This commit updates pg_visibility_map_summary() to use the
visibilitymap_count() API, replacing its own counting mechanism. This
simplifies the function and improves performance by leveraging the
vectorized implementation introduced in commit 41c51f0c68.
Author: Matthias van de Meent <boekewurm+postgres@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: wenhui qiu <qiuwenhuifx@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEze2WgPu-EYYuYQimy=AHQHGa7w8EvLVve5DM5eGMR6zh-7sw@mail.gmail.com
This change has been suggested by the two authors listed in this commit,
both of them providing an incomplete solution (David's formula relied on
a "bytea *", while Bertrand's did not use palloc_array()). The solution
provided in this commit uses GBT_VARKEY instead of the inconsistent
bytea for the allocation size, with a palloc_array().
The change related to Vsrt is one I am flipping to a more consistent
style, in passing.
Author: David Geier <geidav.pg@gmail.com>
Author: Bertrand Drouvot <bertranddrouvot.pg@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ad0748d4-3080-436e-b0bc-ac8f86a3466a@gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/aTrG3Fi4APtfiCvQ@ip-10-97-1-34.eu-west-3.compute.internal
Previously, ltree_prefix_eq_ci() used lowercasing with the default
collation; while ltree_crc32_sz() used tolower() directly. These were
equivalent only if the default collation provider was libc and the
encoding was single-byte.
Change both to use casefolding with the default collation.
Backpatch through 18, where the casefolding APIs were introduced. The
bug exists in earlier versions, but would require some adaptation.
A REINDEX is required for ltree indexes where the database default
collation is not libc.
Reviewed-by: Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut <peter@eisentraut.org>
Backpatch-through: 18
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/450ceb6260cad30d7afdf155d991a9caafee7c0d.camel@j-davis.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/01fc00fd66f641b9693d4f9f1af0ccf44cbdfbdf.camel@j-davis.com
Previously, the API for ltree_strncasecmp() took two inputs but only
one length (that of the smaller input). It truncated the larger input
to that length, but that could break a multibyte sequence.
Change the API to be a check for prefix equality (possibly
case-insensitive) instead, which is all that's needed by the
callers. Also, provide the lengths of both inputs.
Reviewed-by: Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut <peter@eisentraut.org>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5f65b85740197ba6249ea507cddf609f84a6188b.camel%40j-davis.com
Backpatch-through: 14
This commit adds a new "void *arg" parameter to
GetNamedDSMSegment() that is passed to the initialization callback
function. This is useful for reusing an initialization callback
function for multiple DSM segments.
Author: Zsolt Parragi <zsolt.parragi@percona.com>
Reviewed-by: Sami Imseih <samimseih@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAN4CZFMjh8TrT9ZhWgjVTzBDkYZi2a84BnZ8bM%2BfLPuq7Cirzg%40mail.gmail.com
gist_page_items() opens its target relation with index_open(), but
closed it using relation_close() instead of index_close(). This was
harmless because index_close() and relation_close() do the exact same
work, still inconsistent with the rest of the code tree as routines
opening and closing a relation based on a relkind are expected to match,
at least in name.
Author: Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEoWx2=bL41WWcD-4Fxx-buS2Y2G5=9PjkxZbHeFMR6Uy2WNvw@mail.gmail.com
This is the last batch of changes that have been suggested by the
author, this part covering the non-trivial changes. Some of the changes
suggested have been discarded as they seem to lead to more instructions
generated, leaving the parts that can be qualified as in-place
replacements.
Similar work has been done in 1b105f9472, 0c3c5c3b06 and
31d3847a37.
Author: David Geier <geidav.pg@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ad0748d4-3080-436e-b0bc-ac8f86a3466a@gmail.com
The code over-allocated the memory required for os_page_status, relying
on uint64 for its element size instead of an int, hence doubling what
was required. This could mean quite a lot of memory if dealing with a
lot of NUMA pages.
Oversight in ba2a3c2302.
Author: David Geier <geidav.pg@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ad0748d4-3080-436e-b0bc-ac8f86a3466a@gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 18