Commit Graph

1107 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
c81062e8e1 Clean up assorted misuses of snprintf()'s result value.
Fix a small number of places that were testing the result of snprintf()
but doing so incorrectly.  The right test for buffer overrun, per C99,
is "result >= bufsize" not "result > bufsize".  Some places were also
checking for failure with "result == -1", but the standard only says
that a negative value is delivered on failure.

(Note that this only makes these places correct if snprintf() delivers
C99-compliant results.  But at least now these places are consistent
with all the other places where we assume that.)

Also, make psql_start_test() and isolation_start_test() check for
buffer overrun while constructing their shell commands.  There seems
like a higher risk of overrun, with more severe consequences, here
than there is for the individual file paths that are made elsewhere
in the same functions, so this seemed like a worthwhile change.

Also fix guc.c's do_serialize() to initialize errno = 0 before
calling vsnprintf.  In principle, this should be unnecessary because
vsnprintf should have set errno if it returns a failure indication ...
but the other two places this coding pattern is cribbed from don't
assume that, so let's be consistent.

These errors are all very old, so back-patch as appropriate.  I think
that only the shell command overrun cases are even theoretically
reachable in practice, but there's not much point in erroneous error
checks.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17245.1534289329@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-08-15 16:29:32 -04:00
a35d729231 Fix mishandling of quoted-list GUC values in pg_dump and ruleutils.c.
Code that prints out the contents of setconfig or proconfig arrays in
SQL format needs to handle GUC_LIST_QUOTE variables differently from
other ones, because for those variables, flatten_set_variable_args()
already applied a layer of quoting.  The value can therefore safely
be printed as-is, and indeed must be, or flatten_set_variable_args()
will muck it up completely on reload.  For all other GUC variables,
it's necessary and sufficient to quote the value as a SQL literal.

We'd recognized the need for this long ago, but mis-analyzed the
need slightly, thinking that all GUC_LIST_INPUT variables needed
the special treatment.  That's actually wrong, since a valid value
of a LIST variable might include characters that need quoting,
although no existing variables accept such values.

More to the point, we hadn't made any particular effort to keep the
various places that deal with this up-to-date with the set of variables
that actually need special treatment, meaning that we'd do the wrong
thing with, for example, temp_tablespaces values.  This affects dumping
of SET clauses attached to functions, as well as ALTER DATABASE/ROLE SET
commands.

In ruleutils.c we can fix it reasonably honestly by exporting a guc.c
function that allows discovering the flags for a given GUC variable.
But pg_dump doesn't have easy access to that, so continue the old method
of having a hard-wired list of affected variable names.  At least we can
fix it to have just one list not two, and update the list to match
current reality.

A remaining problem with this is that it only works for built-in
GUC variables.  pg_dump's list obvious knows nothing of third-party
extensions, and even the "ask guc.c" method isn't bulletproof since
the relevant extension might not be loaded.  There's no obvious
solution to that, so for now, we'll just have to discourage extension
authors from inventing custom GUCs that need GUC_LIST_QUOTE.

This has been busted for a long time, so back-patch to all supported
branches.

Michael Paquier and Tom Lane, reviewed by Kyotaro Horiguchi and
Pavel Stehule

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180111064900.GA51030@paquier.xyz
2018-03-21 20:03:28 -04:00
1da48a9a6b Fix typo in ALTER SYSTEM output.
The header comment written into postgresql.auto.conf by ALTER SYSTEM
should match what initdb put there originally.

Feike Steenbergen

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAK_s-G0KcKdO=0hqZkwb3s+tqZuuHwWqmF5BDsmoO9FtX75r0g@mail.gmail.com
2017-11-09 11:57:37 -05:00
d90d5a1f7a Add missing comment in postgresql.conf.
current_source requires to restart server to reflect the new
value. Per Yugo Nagata and Masahiko Sawada.

Back patched to 9.2 and beyond.
2017-07-31 11:28:19 +09:00
36bda3937d Add missing comment in postgresql.conf.
dynamic_shared_memory_type requires to restart server to reflect
the new value. Per Yugo Nagata and Masahiko Sawada.

Back pached to 9.4 and beyond.
2017-07-31 11:11:28 +09:00
7d5891f5db Assorted translatable string fixes
Mark our rusage reportage string translatable; remove quotes from type
names; unify formatting of very similar messages.
2017-06-04 11:41:16 -04:00
3aee34d41d Fix typos in comments.
Backpatch to all supported versions, where applicable, to make backpatching
of future fixes go more smoothly.

Josh Soref

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CACZqfqCf+5qRztLPgmmosr-B0Ye4srWzzw_mo4c_8_B_mtjmJQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-02-06 11:34:18 +02:00
b9ee42e70a Code review for GUC serialization/deserialization code.
The serialization code dumped core for a string-valued GUC whose value
is NULL, which is a legal state.  The infrastructure isn't capable of
transmitting that state exactly, but fortunately, transmitting an empty
string instead should be close enough (compare, eg, commit e45e990e4).

The code potentially underestimated the space required to format a
real-valued variable, both because it made an unwarranted assumption that
%g output would never be longer than %e output, and because it didn't count
right even for %e format.  In practice this would pretty much always be
masked by overestimates for other variables, but it's still wrong.

Also fix boundary-case error in read_gucstate, incorrect handling of the
case where guc_sourcefile is non-NULL but zero length (not clear that can
happen, but if it did, this code would get totally confused), and
confusingly useless check for a NULL result from read_gucstate.

Andreas Seltenreich discovered the core dump; other issues noted while
reading nearby code.  Back-patch to 9.5 where this code was introduced.

Michael Paquier and Tom Lane

Discussion: <871sy78wno.fsf@credativ.de>
2016-11-19 14:26:20 -05:00
f50fa46cca Show a sensible value in pg_settings.unit for GUC_UNIT_XSEGS variables.
Commit 88e982302 invented GUC_UNIT_XSEGS for min_wal_size and max_wal_size,
but neglected to make it display sensibly in pg_settings.unit (by adding a
case to the switch in GetConfigOptionByNum).  Fix that, and adjust said
switch to throw a run-time error the next time somebody forgets.

In passing, avoid using a static buffer for the output string --- the rest
of this function pstrdup's from a local buffer, and I see no very good
reason why the units code should do it differently and less safely.

Per report from Otar Shavadze.  Back-patch to 9.5 where the new unit type
was added.

Report: <CAG-jOyA=iNFhN+yB4vfvqh688B7Tr5SArbYcFUAjZi=0Exp-Lg@mail.gmail.com>
2016-10-03 16:40:27 -04:00
350db87203 Remove very-obsolete estimates of shmem usage from postgresql.conf.sample.
runtime.sgml used to contain a table of estimated shared memory consumption
rates for max_connections and some other GUCs.  Commit 390bfc643 removed
that on the well-founded grounds that (a) we weren't maintaining the
entries well and (b) it no longer mattered so much once we got out from
under SysV shmem limits.  But it missed that there were even-more-obsolete
versions of some of those numbers in comments in postgresql.conf.sample.
Remove those too.  Back-patch to 9.3 where the aforesaid commit went in.
2016-07-19 18:41:30 -04:00
cea17ba07a Be more predictable about reporting "lock timeout" vs "statement timeout".
If both timeout indicators are set when we arrive at ProcessInterrupts,
we've historically just reported "lock timeout".  However, some buildfarm
members have been observed to fail isolationtester's timeouts test by
reporting "lock timeout" when the statement timeout was expected to fire
first.  The cause seems to be that the process is allowed to sleep longer
than expected (probably due to heavy machine load) so that the lock
timeout happens before we reach the point of reporting the error, and
then this arbitrary tiebreak rule does the wrong thing.  We can improve
matters by comparing the scheduled timeout times to decide which error
to report.

I had originally proposed greatly reducing the 1-second window between
the two timeouts in the test cases.  On reflection that is a bad idea,
at least for the case where the lock timeout is expected to fire first,
because that would assume that it takes negligible time to get from
statement start to the beginning of the lock wait.  Thus, this patch
doesn't completely remove the risk of test failures on slow machines.
Empirically, however, the case this handles is the one we are seeing
in the buildfarm.  The explanation may be that the other case requires
the scheduler to take the CPU away from a busy process, whereas the
case fixed here only requires the scheduler to not give the CPU back
right away to a process that has been woken from a multi-second sleep
(and, perhaps, has been swapped out meanwhile).

Back-patch to 9.3 where the isolationtester timeouts test was added.

Discussion: <8693.1464314819@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-05-27 10:40:20 -04:00
f3d17491c4 Disallow newlines in parameter values to be set in ALTER SYSTEM.
As noted by Julian Schauder in bug #14063, the configuration-file parser
doesn't support embedded newlines in string literals.  While there might
someday be a good reason to remove that restriction, there doesn't seem
to be one right now.  However, ALTER SYSTEM SET could accept strings
containing newlines, since many of the variable-specific value-checking
routines would just see a newline as whitespace.  This led to writing a
postgresql.auto.conf file that was broken and had to be removed manually.

Pending a reason to work harder, just throw an error if someone tries this.

In passing, fix several places in the ALTER SYSTEM logic that failed to
provide an errcode() for an ereport(), and thus would falsely log the
failure as an internal XX000 error.

Back-patch to 9.4 where ALTER SYSTEM was introduced.
2016-04-04 18:05:23 -04:00
301cc3549c Avoid unlikely data-loss scenarios due to rename() without fsync.
Renaming a file using rename(2) is not guaranteed to be durable in face
of crashes. Use the previously added durable_rename()/durable_link_or_rename()
in various places where we previously just renamed files.

Most of the changed call sites are arguably not critical, but it seems
better to err on the side of too much durability.  The most prominent
known case where the previously missing fsyncs could cause data loss is
crashes at the end of a checkpoint. After the actual checkpoint has been
performed, old WAL files are recycled. When they're filled, their
contents are fdatasynced, but we did not fsync the containing
directory. An OS/hardware crash in an unfortunate moment could then end
up leaving that file with its old name, but new content; WAL replay
would thus not replay it.

Reported-By: Tomas Vondra
Author: Michael Paquier, Tomas Vondra, Andres Freund
Discussion: 56583BDD.9060302@2ndquadrant.com
Backpatch: All supported branches
2016-03-09 18:53:53 -08:00
0089dd34aa Force certain "pljava" custom GUCs to be PGC_SUSET.
Future PL/Java versions will close CVE-2016-0766 by making these GUCs
PGC_SUSET.  This PostgreSQL change independently mitigates that PL/Java
vulnerability, helping sites that update PostgreSQL more frequently than
PL/Java.  Back-patch to 9.1 (all supported versions).
2016-02-05 20:23:04 -05:00
6a77404f5c Adjust behavior of row_security GUC to match the docs.
Some time back we agreed that row_security=off should not be a way to
bypass RLS entirely, but only a way to get an error if it was being
applied.  However, the code failed to act that way for table owners.
Per discussion, this is a must-fix bug for 9.5.0.

Adjust the logic in rls.c to behave as expected; also, modify the
error message to be more consistent with the new interpretation.
The regression tests need minor corrections as well.  Also update
the comments about row_security in ddl.sgml to be correct.  (The
official description of the GUC in config.sgml is already correct.)

I failed to resist the temptation to do some other very minor
cleanup as well, such as getting rid of a duplicate extern declaration.
2016-01-04 12:21:43 -05:00
689cabf402 Message improvements 2015-11-16 21:16:42 -05:00
b06f1f286d Put back ssl_renegotiation_limit parameter, but only allow 0.
Per a report from Shay Rojansky, Npgsql sends ssl_renegotiation_limit=0
in the startup packet because it does not support renegotiation; other
clients which have not attempted to support renegotiation might well
behave similarly.  The recent removal of this parameter forces them to
break compatibility with either current PostgreSQL versions, or
previous ones.  Per discussion, the best solution is to accept the
parameter but only allow a value of 0.

Shay Rojansky, edited a little by me.
2015-10-20 09:59:39 -04:00
90f334d2ca ALTER TABLE .. FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY
To allow users to force RLS to always be applied, even for table owners,
add ALTER TABLE .. FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY.

row_security=off overrides FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY, to ensure pg_dump
output is complete (by default).

Also add SECURITY_NOFORCE_RLS context to avoid data corruption when
ALTER TABLE .. FORCE ROW SECURITY is being used. The
SECURITY_NOFORCE_RLS security context is used only during referential
integrity checks and is only considered in check_enable_rls() after we
have already checked that the current user is the owner of the relation
(which should always be the case during referential integrity checks).

Back-patch to 9.5 where RLS was added.
2015-10-04 21:05:18 -04:00
e45f8f8820 Group cluster_name and update_process_title settings together 2015-10-04 12:29:50 -04:00
01ba7894f3 Make BYPASSRLS behave like superuser RLS bypass.
Specifically, make its effect independent from the row_security GUC, and
make it affect permission checks pertinent to views the BYPASSRLS role
owns.  The row_security GUC thereby ceases to change successful-query
behavior; it can only make a query fail with an error.  Back-patch to
9.5, where BYPASSRLS was introduced.
2015-10-03 20:20:50 -04:00
ef4fccd2b6 Lower *_freeze_max_age minimum values.
The old minimum values are rather large, making it time consuming to
test related behaviour. Additionally the current limits, especially for
multixacts, can be problematic in space-constrained systems. 10000000
multixacts can contain a lot of members.

Since there's no good reason for the current limits, lower them a good
bit. Setting them to 0 would be a bad idea, triggering endless vacuums,
so still retain a limit.

While at it fix autovacuum_multixact_freeze_max_age to refer to
multixact.c instead of varsup.c.

Reviewed-By: Robert Haas
Discussion: CA+TgmoYmQPHcrc3GSs7vwvrbTkbcGD9Gik=OztbDGGrovkkEzQ@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: back to 9.0 (in parts)
2015-09-24 14:53:33 +02:00
bbdb9dfbc3 Remove the SECURITY_ROW_LEVEL_DISABLED security context bit.
This commit's parent made superfluous the bit's sole usage.  Referential
integrity checks have long run as the subject table's owner, and that
now implies RLS bypass.  Safe use of the bit was tricky, requiring
strict control over the SQL expressions evaluating therein.  Back-patch
to 9.5, where the bit was introduced.

Based on a patch by Stephen Frost.
2015-09-20 20:47:36 -04:00
6dae6edcd8 Remove the row_security=force GUC value.
Every query of a single ENABLE ROW SECURITY table has two meanings, with
the row_security GUC selecting between them.  With row_security=force
available, every function author would have been advised to either set
the GUC locally or test both meanings.  Non-compliance would have
threatened reliability and, for SECURITY DEFINER functions, security.
Authors already face an obligation to account for search_path, and we
should not mimic that example.  With this change, only BYPASSRLS roles
need exercise the aforementioned care.  Back-patch to 9.5, where the
row_security GUC was introduced.

Since this narrows the domain of pg_db_role_setting.setconfig and
pg_proc.proconfig, one might bump catversion.  A row_security=force
setting in one of those columns will elicit a clear message, so don't.
2015-09-20 20:45:54 -04:00
97b7b9560f Add gin_fuzzy_search_limit to postgresql.conf.sample.
This was forgotten in 8a3631f (commit that originally added the parameter)
and 0ca9907 (commit that added the documentation later that year).

Back-patch to all supported versions.
2015-09-09 02:26:36 +09:00
27347c4841 Improve whitespace 2015-08-22 21:41:29 -04:00
d19c1b0b24 Don't use 'bool' as a struct member name in help_config.c.
Doing so doesn't work if bool is a macro rather than a typedef.

Although c.h spends some effort to support configurations where bool is
a preexisting macro, help_config.c has existed this way since
2003 (b700a6), and there have not been any reports of
problems. Backpatch anyway since this is as riskless as it gets.

Discussion: 20150812084351.GD8470@awork2.anarazel.de
Backpatch: 9.0-master
2015-08-15 16:44:30 +02:00
cd52e4a2b9 Cap wal_buffers to avoid a server crash when it's set very large.
It must be possible to multiply wal_buffers by XLOG_BLCKSZ without
overflowing int, or calculations in StartupXLOG will go badly wrong
and crash the server.  Avoid that by imposing a maximum value on
wal_buffers.  This will be just under 2GB, assuming the usual value
for XLOG_BLCKSZ.

Josh Berkus, per an analysis by Andrew Gierth.
2015-08-04 13:05:43 -04:00
cfa928ff6f Plug RLS related information leak in pg_stats view.
The pg_stats view is supposed to be restricted to only show rows
about tables the user can read. However, it sometimes can leak
information which could not otherwise be seen when row level security
is enabled. Fix that by not showing pg_stats rows to users that would
be subject to RLS on the table the row is related to. This is done
by creating/using the newly introduced SQL visible function,
row_security_active().

Along the way, clean up three call sites of check_enable_rls(). The second
argument of that function should only be specified as other than
InvalidOid when we are checking as a different user than the current one,
as in when querying through a view. These sites were passing GetUserId()
instead of InvalidOid, which can cause the function to return incorrect
results if the current user has the BYPASSRLS privilege and row_security
has been set to OFF.

Additionally fix a bug causing RI Trigger error messages to unintentionally
leak information when RLS is enabled, and other minor cleanup and
improvements. Also add WITH (security_barrier) to the definition of pg_stats.

Bumped CATVERSION due to new SQL functions and pg_stats view definition.

Back-patch to 9.5 where RLS was introduced. Reported by Yaroslav.
Patch by Joe Conway and Dean Rasheed with review and input by
Michael Paquier and Stephen Frost.
2015-07-28 13:21:37 -07:00
6087d952b3 Remove ssl renegotiation support.
While postgres' use of SSL renegotiation is a good idea in theory, it
turned out to not work well in practice. The specification and openssl's
implementation of it have lead to several security issues. Postgres' use
of renegotiation also had its share of bugs.

Additionally OpenSSL has a bunch of bugs around renegotiation, reported
and open for years, that regularly lead to connections breaking with
obscure error messages. We tried increasingly complex workarounds to get
around these bugs, but we didn't find anything complete.

Since these connection breakages often lead to hard to debug problems,
e.g. spuriously failing base backups and significant latency spikes when
synchronous replication is used, we have decided to change the default
setting for ssl renegotiation to 0 (disabled) in the released
backbranches and remove it entirely in 9.5 and master.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: 20150624144148.GQ4797@alap3.anarazel.de
Backpatch: 9.5 and master, 9.0-9.4 get a different patch
2015-07-28 22:06:31 +02:00
6fcb337fa5 Redesign tablesample method API, and do extensive code review.
The original implementation of TABLESAMPLE modeled the tablesample method
API on index access methods, which wasn't a good choice because, without
specialized DDL commands, there's no way to build an extension that can
implement a TSM.  (Raw inserts into system catalogs are not an acceptable
thing to do, because we can't undo them during DROP EXTENSION, nor will
pg_upgrade behave sanely.)  Instead adopt an API more like procedural
language handlers or foreign data wrappers, wherein the only SQL-level
support object needed is a single handler function identified by having
a special return type.  This lets us get rid of the supporting catalog
altogether, so that no custom DDL support is needed for the feature.

Adjust the API so that it can support non-constant tablesample arguments
(the original coding assumed we could evaluate the argument expressions at
ExecInitSampleScan time, which is undesirable even if it weren't outright
unsafe), and discourage sampling methods from looking at invisible tuples.
Make sure that the BERNOULLI and SYSTEM methods are genuinely repeatable
within and across queries, as required by the SQL standard, and deal more
honestly with methods that can't support that requirement.

Make a full code-review pass over the tablesample additions, and fix
assorted bugs, omissions, infelicities, and cosmetic issues (such as
failure to put the added code stanzas in a consistent ordering).
Improve EXPLAIN's output of tablesample plans, too.

Back-patch to 9.5 so that we don't have to support the original API
in production.
2015-07-25 14:39:00 -04:00
19a6545815 Make wal_compression PGC_SUSET rather than PGC_USERSET.
When enabling wal_compression, there is a risk to leak data similarly to
the BREACH and CRIME attacks on SSL where the compression ratio of
a full page image gives a hint of what is the existing data of this page.
This vulnerability is quite cumbersome to exploit in practice, but doable.

So this patch makes wal_compression PGC_SUSET in order to prevent
non-superusers from enabling it and exploiting the vulnerability while
DBA thinks the risk very seriously and disables it in postgresql.conf.

Back-patch to 9.5 where wal_compression was introduced.
2015-07-09 22:31:39 +09:00
cd7030ff08 Make sampler_random_fract() actually obey its API contract.
This function is documented to return a value in the range (0,1),
which is what its predecessor anl_random_fract() did.  However, the
new version depends on pg_erand48() which returns a value in [0,1).
The possibility of returning zero creates hazards of division by zero
or trying to compute log(0) at some call sites, and it might well
break third-party modules using anl_random_fract() too.  So let's
change it to never return zero.  Spotted by Coverity.

Michael Paquier, cosmetically adjusted by me
2015-07-01 18:07:59 -04:00
2bdc51a294 Run the C portions of guc-file.l through pgindent.
Yeah, I know, pretty anal-retentive of me.  But we oughta find some
way to automate this for the .y and .l files.
2015-06-28 20:49:35 -04:00
62d16c7fc5 Improve design and implementation of pg_file_settings view.
As first committed, this view reported on the file contents as they were
at the last SIGHUP event.  That's not as useful as reporting on the current
contents, and what's more, it didn't work right on Windows unless the
current session had serviced at least one SIGHUP.  Therefore, arrange to
re-read the files when pg_show_all_settings() is called.  This requires
only minor refactoring so that we can pass changeVal = false to
set_config_option() so that it won't actually apply any changes locally.

In addition, add error reporting so that errors that would prevent the
configuration files from being loaded, or would prevent individual settings
from being applied, are visible directly in the view.  This makes the view
usable for pre-testing whether edits made in the config files will have the
desired effect, before one actually issues a SIGHUP.

I also added an "applied" column so that it's easy to identify entries that
are superseded by later entries; this was the main use-case for the original
design, but it seemed unnecessarily hard to use for that.

Also fix a 9.4.1 regression that allowed multiple entries for a
PGC_POSTMASTER variable to cause bogus complaints in the postmaster log.
(The issue here was that commit bf007a27acd7b2fb unintentionally reverted
3e3f65973a3c94a6, which suppressed any duplicate entries within
ParseConfigFp.  However, since the original coding of the pg_file_settings
view depended on such suppression *not* happening, we couldn't have fixed
this issue now without first doing something with pg_file_settings.
Now we suppress duplicates by marking them "ignored" within
ProcessConfigFileInternal, which doesn't hide them in the view.)

Lesser changes include:

Drive the view directly off the ConfigVariable list, instead of making a
basically-equivalent second copy of the data.  There's no longer any need
to hang onto the data permanently, anyway.

Convert show_all_file_settings() to do its work in one call and return a
tuplestore; this avoids risks associated with assuming that the GUC state
will hold still over the course of query execution.  (I think there were
probably latent bugs here, though you might need something like a cursor
on the view to expose them.)

Arrange to run SIGHUP processing in a short-lived memory context, to
forestall process-lifespan memory leaks.  (There is one known leak in this
code, in ProcessConfigDirectory; it seems minor enough to not be worth
back-patching a specific fix for.)

Remove mistaken assignment to ConfigFileLineno that caused line counting
after an include_dir directive to be completely wrong.

Add missed failure check in AlterSystemSetConfigFile().  We don't really
expect ParseConfigFp() to fail, but that's not an excuse for not checking.
2015-06-28 18:06:14 -04:00
091c02a958 Fix alphabetization in catalogs.sgml.
System catalogs and views should be listed alphabetically
in catalog.sgml, but only pg_file_settings view not.

This patch also fixes typos in pg_file_settings comments.
2015-06-12 12:59:29 +09:00
da33a3894e Revert exporting of internal GUC variable "data_directory".
This undoes a poorly-thought-out choice in commit 970a18687f9b3058, namely
to export guc.c's internal variable data_directory.  The authoritative
variable so far as C code is concerned is DataDir; there is no reason for
anything except specific bits of GUC code to look at the GUC variable.

After yesterday's commits fixing the fsync-on-restart patch, the only
remaining misuse of data_directory was in AlterSystemSetConfigFile(),
which would be much better off just using a relative path anyhow: it's
less code and it doesn't break if the DBA moves the data directory of a
running system, which is a case we've taken some pains over in the past.

This is mostly cosmetic, so no need for a back-patch (and I'd be hesitant
to remove a global variable in stable branches anyway).
2015-05-29 11:57:33 -04:00
807b9e0dff pgindent run for 9.5 2015-05-23 21:35:49 -04:00
4fc72cc7bb Collection of typo fixes.
Use "a" and "an" correctly, mostly in comments. Two error messages were
also fixed (they were just elogs, so no translation work required). Two
function comments in pg_proc.h were also fixed. Etsuro Fujita reported one
of these, but I found a lot more with grep.

Also fix a few other typos spotted while grepping for the a/an typos.
For example, "consists out of ..." -> "consists of ...". Plus a "though"/
"through" mixup reported by Euler Taveira.

Many of these typos were in old code, which would be nice to backpatch to
make future backpatching easier. But much of the code was new, and I didn't
feel like crafting separate patches for each branch. So no backpatching.
2015-05-20 16:56:22 +03:00
4db485e75b Put back a backwards-compatible version of sampling support functions.
Commit 83e176ec18d2a91dbea1d0d1bd94c38dc47cd77c removed the longstanding
support functions for block sampling without any consideration of the
impact this would have on third-party FDWs.  The new API is not notably
more functional for FDWs than the old, so forcing them to change doesn't
seem like a good thing.  We can provide the old API as a wrapper (more
or less) around the new one for a minimal amount of extra code.
2015-05-18 18:34:37 -04:00
f6d208d6e5 TABLESAMPLE, SQL Standard and extensible
Add a TABLESAMPLE clause to SELECT statements that allows
user to specify random BERNOULLI sampling or block level
SYSTEM sampling. Implementation allows for extensible
sampling functions to be written, using a standard API.
Basic version follows SQLStandard exactly. Usable
concrete use cases for the sampling API follow in later
commits.

Petr Jelinek

Reviewed by Michael Paquier and Simon Riggs
2015-05-15 14:37:10 -04:00
ffd37740ee Add archive_mode='always' option.
In 'always' mode, the standby independently archives all files it receives
from the primary.

Original patch by Fujii Masao, docs and review by me.
2015-05-15 18:55:24 +03:00
83e176ec18 Separate block sampling functions
Refactoring ahead of tablesample patch

Requested and reviewed by Michael Paquier

Petr Jelinek
2015-05-15 04:02:54 +02:00
a486e35706 Add pg_settings.pending_restart column
with input from David G. Johnston, Robert Haas, Michael Paquier
2015-05-14 20:08:51 -04:00
0cf56f14dd Improve ParseConfigFp comment wrt head/tail
The head_p and tail_p pointers passed to ParseConfigFp() are actually
input/output parameters, not strictly output paramaters.  This updates
the function comment to reflect that.

Per discussion with Tom.
2015-05-09 11:13:37 -04:00
a97e0c3354 Add pg_file_settings view and function
The function and view added here provide a way to look at all settings
in postgresql.conf, any #include'd files, and postgresql.auto.conf
(which is what backs the ALTER SYSTEM command).

The information returned includes the configuration file name, line
number in that file, sequence number indicating when the parameter is
loaded (useful to see if it is later masked by another definition of the
same parameter), parameter name, and what it is set to at that point.
This information is updated on reload of the server.

This is unfiltered, privileged, information and therefore access is
restricted to superusers through the GRANT system.

Author: Sawada Masahiko, various improvements by me.
Reviewers: David Steele
2015-05-08 19:09:26 -04:00
924bcf4f16 Create an infrastructure for parallel computation in PostgreSQL.
This does four basic things.  First, it provides convenience routines
to coordinate the startup and shutdown of parallel workers.  Second,
it synchronizes various pieces of state (e.g. GUCs, combo CID
mappings, transaction snapshot) from the parallel group leader to the
worker processes.  Third, it prohibits various operations that would
result in unsafe changes to that state while parallelism is active.
Finally, it propagates events that would result in an ErrorResponse,
NoticeResponse, or NotifyResponse message being sent to the client
from the parallel workers back to the master, from which they can then
be sent on to the client.

Robert Haas, Amit Kapila, Noah Misch, Rushabh Lathia, Jeevan Chalke.
Suggestions and review from Andres Freund, Heikki Linnakangas, Noah
Misch, Simon Riggs, Euler Taveira, and Jim Nasby.
2015-04-30 15:02:14 -04:00
a10589a512 Remove duplicated words in comments.
David Rowley
2015-04-12 10:46:17 +03:00
abd94bcac4 Use abbreviated keys for faster sorting of numeric datums.
Andrew Gierth, reviewed by Peter Geoghegan, with further tweaks by me.
2015-04-02 14:04:26 -04:00
9a8e23311c Remove a couple other vestigial yylex() declarations.
These were workarounds for a long-gone flex bug; all supported versions
of flex emit an extern declaration as expected.
2015-03-29 13:12:28 -04:00
785941cdc3 Tweak __attribute__-wrapping macros for better pgindent results.
This improves on commit bbfd7edae5aa5ad5553d3c7e102f2e450d4380d4 by
making two simple changes:

* pg_attribute_noreturn now takes parentheses, ie pg_attribute_noreturn().
Likewise pg_attribute_unused(), pg_attribute_packed().  This reduces
pgindent's tendency to misformat declarations involving them.

* attributes are now always attached to function declarations, not
definitions.  Previously some places were taking creative shortcuts,
which were not merely candidates for bad misformatting by pgindent
but often were outright wrong anyway.  (It does little good to put a
noreturn annotation where callers can't see it.)  In any case, if
we would like to believe that these macros can be used with non-gcc
compilers, we should avoid gratuitous variance in usage patterns.

I also went through and manually improved the formatting of a lot of
declarations, and got rid of excessively repetitive (and now obsolete
anyway) comments informing the reader what pg_attribute_printf is for.
2015-03-26 14:03:25 -04:00