Commit Graph

24952 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
73ac2b3740 Fix various instances of undefined behavior
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
2026-02-04 17:59:18 +07:00
4297a35196 Fix possible issue of a WindowFunc being in the wrong WindowClause
ed1a88dda made it so WindowClauses can be merged when all window
functions belonging to the WindowClause can equally well use some
other WindowClause without any behavioral changes.  When that
optimization applies, the WindowFunc's "winref" gets adjusted to
reference the new WindowClause.

That commit does not work well with the deduplication logic in
find_window_functions(), which only added the WindowFunc to the list
when there wasn't already an identical WindowFunc in the list.  That
deduplication logic meant that the duplicate WindowFunc wouldn't get the
"winref" changed when optimize_window_clauses() was able to swap the
WindowFunc to another WindowClause.  This could lead to the following
error in the unlikely event that the deduplication code did something and
the duplicate WindowFunc happened to be moved into another WindowClause.

ERROR:  WindowFunc with winref 2 assigned to WindowAgg with winref 1

As it turns out, the deduplication logic in find_window_functions() is
pretty bogus.  It might have done something when added, as that code
predates b8d7f053c, which changed how projections work.  As it turns
out, at least now we *will* evaluate the duplicate WindowFuncs.  All
that the deduplication code seems to do today is assist in
underestimating the WindowAggPath costs due to not counting the
evaluation costs of duplicate WindowFuncs.

Ideally the fix would be to remove the deduplication code, but that
could result in changes to the plan costs, as duplicate WindowFuncs
would then be costed.  Instead, let's play it safe and shift the
deduplication code so it runs after the other processing in
optimize_window_clauses().

Backpatch only as far as v16 as there doesn't seem to be any other harm
done by the WindowFunc deduplication code before then.  This issue was
fixed in master by 7027dd499.

Reported-by: Meng Zhang <mza117jc@gmail.com>
Author: Meng Zhang <mza117jc@gmail.com>
Author: David Rowley <dgrowleyml@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAErYLFAuxmW0UVdgrz7iiuNrxGQnFK_OP9hBD5CUzRgjrVrz=Q@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 16
2026-01-26 23:47:37 +13:00
e7391bbf14 Fix trigger transition table capture for MERGE in CTE queries.
When executing a data-modifying CTE query containing MERGE and some
other DML operation on a table with statement-level AFTER triggers,
the transition tables passed to the triggers would fail to include the
rows affected by the MERGE.

The reason is that, when initializing a ModifyTable node for MERGE,
MakeTransitionCaptureState() would create a TransitionCaptureState
structure with a single "tcs_private" field pointing to an
AfterTriggersTableData structure with cmdType == CMD_MERGE. Tuples
captured there would then not be included in the sets of tuples
captured when executing INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE ModifyTable nodes in the
same query.

Since there are no MERGE triggers, we should only create
AfterTriggersTableData structures for INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE. Individual
MERGE actions should then use those, thereby sharing the same capture
tuplestores as any other DML commands executed in the same query.

This requires changing the TransitionCaptureState structure, replacing
"tcs_private" with 3 separate pointers to AfterTriggersTableData
structures, one for each of INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE. Nominally,
this is an ABI break to a public structure in commands/trigger.h.
However, since this is a private field pointing to an opaque data
structure, the only way to create a valid TransitionCaptureState is by
calling MakeTransitionCaptureState(), and no extensions appear to be
doing that anyway, so it seems safe for back-patching.

Backpatch to v15, where MERGE was introduced.

Bug: #19380
Reported-by: Daniel Woelfel <dwwoelfel@gmail.com>
Author: Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/19380-4e293be2b4007248%40postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 15
2026-01-24 11:30:50 +00:00
fab386f748 Fix bogus ctid requirement for dummy-root partitioned targets
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
2026-01-23 10:23:18 +09:00
3f56de3aad Remove faulty Assert in partitioned INSERT...ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE.
Commit f16241bef mistakenly supposed that INSERT...ON CONFLICT DO
UPDATE rejects partitioned target tables.  (This may have been
accurate when the patch was written, but it was already obsolete
when committed.)  Hence, there's an assertion that we can't see
ItemPointerIndicatesMovedPartitions() in that path, but the assertion
is triggerable.

Some other places throw error if they see a moved-across-partitions
tuple, but there seems no need for that here, because if we just retry
then we get the same behavior as in the update-within-partition case,
as demonstrated by the new isolation test.  So fix by deleting the
faulty Assert.  (The fact that this is the fix doubtless explains
why we've heard no field complaints: the behavior of a non-assert
build is fine.)

The TM_Deleted case contains a cargo-culted copy of the same Assert,
which I also deleted to avoid confusion, although I believe that one
is actually not triggerable.

Per our code coverage report, neither the TM_Updated nor the
TM_Deleted case were reached at all by existing tests, so this
patch adds tests for both.

Reported-by: Dmitry Koval <d.koval@postgrespro.ru>
Author: Joseph Koshakow <koshy44@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f5fffe4b-11b2-4557-a864-3587ff9b4c36@postgrespro.ru
Backpatch-through: 14
2026-01-22 18:35:31 -05:00
7600dc79c2 jit: Add missing inline pass for LLVM >= 17.
With LLVM >= 17, transform passes are provided as a string to
LLVMRunPasses. Only two strings were used: "default<O3>" and
"default<O0>,mem2reg".

With previous LLVM versions, an additional inline pass was added when
JIT inlining was enabled without optimization. With LLVM >= 17, the code
would go through llvm_inline, prepare the functions for inlining, but
the generated bitcode would be the same due to the missing inline pass.

This patch restores the previous behavior by adding an inline pass when
inlining is enabled but no optimization is done.

This fixes an oversight introduced by 76200e5e when support for LLVM 17
was added.

Backpatch-through: 14
Author: Anthonin Bonnefoy <anthonin.bonnefoy@datadoghq.com>
Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Andreas Karlsson <andreas@proxel.se>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@kurilemu.de>
Reviewed-by: Pierre Ducroquet <p.psql@pinaraf.info>
Reviewed-by: Matheus Alcantara <matheusssilv97@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAO6_XqrNjJnbn15ctPv7o4yEAT9fWa-dK15RSyun6QNw9YDtKg%40mail.gmail.com
2026-01-22 16:10:08 +13:00
e8fd6c9fda Fix error message related to end TLI in backup manifest
The code adding the WAL information included in a backup manifest is
cross-checked with the contents of the timeline history file of the end
timeline.  A check based on the end timeline, when it fails, reported
the value of the start timeline in the error message.  This error is
fixed to show the correct timeline number in the report.

This error report would be confusing for users if seen, because it would
provide an incorrect information, so backpatch all the way down.

Oversight in 0d8c9c1210c4.

Author: Man Zeng <zengman@halodbtech.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/tencent_0F2949C4594556F672CF4658@qq.com
Backpatch-through: 14
2026-01-18 17:25:01 +09:00
980b7c7369 Fix segfault from releasing locks in detached DSM segments
If a FATAL error occurs while holding a lock in a DSM segment (such
as a dshash lock) and the process is not in a transaction, a
segmentation fault can occur during process exit.

The problem sequence is:

 1. Process acquires a lock in a DSM segment (e.g., via dshash)
 2. FATAL error occurs outside transaction context
 3. proc_exit() begins, calling before_shmem_exit callbacks
 4. dsm_backend_shutdown() detaches all DSM segments
 5. Later, on_shmem_exit callbacks run
 6. ProcKill() calls LWLockReleaseAll()
 7. Segfault: the lock being released is in unmapped memory

This only manifests outside transaction contexts because
AbortTransaction() calls LWLockReleaseAll() during transaction
abort, releasing locks before DSM cleanup. Background workers and
other non-transactional code paths are vulnerable.

Fix by calling LWLockReleaseAll() unconditionally at the start of
shmem_exit(), before any callbacks run. Releasing locks before
callbacks prevents the segfault - locks must be released before
dsm_backend_shutdown() detaches their memory. This is safe because
after an error, held locks are protecting potentially inconsistent
data anyway, and callbacks can acquire fresh locks if needed.

Also add a comment noting that LWLockReleaseAll() must be safe to
call before LWLock initialization (which it is, since
num_held_lwlocks will be 0), plus an Assert for the post-condition.

This fix aligns with the original design intent from commit
001a573a2, which noted that backends must clean up shared memory
state (including releasing lwlocks) before unmapping dynamic shared
memory segments.

Reported-by: Rahila Syed <rahilasyed90@gmail.com>
Author: Rahila Syed <rahilasyed90@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote <amitlangote09@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Dilip Kumar <dilipbalaut@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@kurilemu.de>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2L28uSvyiosL+kaic9249jRVoQiQF6JOnaCitKFq=xiFzX3g@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 14
2026-01-16 13:19:59 +09:00
a2eeb04f3a Fix 'unexpected data beyond EOF' on replica restart
On restart, a replica can fail with an error like 'unexpected data
beyond EOF in block 200 of relation T/D/R'. These are the steps to
reproduce it:

- A relation has a size of 400 blocks.
  - Blocks 201 to 400 are empty.
  - Block 200 has two rows.
  - Blocks 100 to 199 are empty.
- A restartpoint is done
- Vacuum truncates the relation to 200 blocks
- A FPW deletes a row in block 200
- A checkpoint is done
- A FPW deletes the last row in block 200
- Vacuum truncates the relation to 100 blocks
- The replica restarts

When the replica restarts:

- The relation on disk starts at 100 blocks, because all the
  truncations were applied before restart.
- The first truncate to 200 blocks is replayed. It silently fails, but
  it will still (incorrectly!) update the cache size to 200 blocks
- The first FPW on block 200 is applied. XLogReadBufferForRead relies
  on the cached size and incorrectly assumes that the page already
  exists in the file, and thus won't extend the relation.
- The online checkpoint record is replayed, calling smgrdestroyall
  which causes the cached size to be discarded
- The second FPW on block 200 is applied. This time, the detected size
  is 100 blocks, an extend is attempted. However, the block 200 is
  already present in the buffer cache due to the first FPW. This
  triggers the 'unexpected data beyond EOF'.

To fix, update the cached size in SmgrRelation with the current size
rather than the requested new size, when the requested new size is
greater.

Author: Anthonin Bonnefoy <anthonin.bonnefoy@datadoghq.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAO6_Xqrv-snNJNhbj1KjQmWiWHX3nYGDgAc=vxaZP3qc4g1Siw@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 14
2026-01-15 21:03:12 +02:00
c7946e6f32 Add check for invalid offset at multixid truncation
If a multixid with zero offset is left behind after a crash, and that
multixid later becomes the oldest multixid, truncation might try to
look up its offset and read the zero value. In the worst case, we
might incorrectly use the zero offset to truncate valid SLRU segments
that are still needed. I'm not sure if that can happen in practice, or
if there are some other lower-level safeguards or incidental reasons
that prevent the caller from passing an unwritten multixid as the
oldest multi. But better safe than sorry, so let's add an explicit
check for it.

In stable branches, we should perhaps do the same check for
'oldestOffset', i.e. the offset of the old oldest multixid (in master,
'oldestOffset' is gone). But if the old oldest multixid has an invalid
offset, the damage has been done already, and we would never advance
past that point. It's not clear what we should do in that case. The
check that this commit adds will prevent such an multixid with invalid
offset from becoming the oldest multixid in the first place, which
seems enough for now.

Reviewed-by: Andrey Borodin <x4mmm@yandex-team.ru>
Discussion: Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/000301b2-5b81-4938-bdac-90f6eb660843@iki.fi
Backpatch-through: 14
2026-01-15 16:50:37 +02:00
821c4d27bc Fix possible incorrect column reference in ERROR message
When creating a partition for a RANGE partitioned table, the reporting
of errors relating to converting the specified range values into
constant values for the partition key's type could display the name of a
previous partition key column when an earlier range was specified as
MINVALUE or MAXVALUE.

This was caused by the code not correctly incrementing the index that
tracks which partition key the foreach loop was working on after
processing MINVALUE/MAXVALUE ranges.

Fix by using foreach_current_index() to ensure the index variable is
always set to the List element being worked on.

Author: myzhen <zhenmingyang@yeah.net>
Reviewed-by: zhibin wang <killerwzb@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/273cab52.978.19b96fc75e7.Coremail.zhenmingyang@yeah.net
Backpatch-through: 14
2026-01-09 11:03:48 +13:00
24cce33c33 Prevent invalidation of newly created replication slots.
A race condition could cause a newly created replication slot to become
invalidated between WAL reservation and a checkpoint.

Previously, if the required WAL was removed, we retried the reservation
process. However, the slot could still be invalidated before the retry if
the WAL was not yet removed but the checkpoint advanced the redo pointer
beyond the slot's intended restart LSN and computed the minimum LSN that
needs to be preserved for the slots.

The fix is to acquire an exclusive lock on ReplicationSlotAllocationLock
during WAL reservation, and a shared lock during the minimum LSN
calculation at checkpoints to serialize the process. This ensures that, if
WAL reservation occurs first, the checkpoint waits until restart_lsn is
updated before calculating the minimum LSN. If the checkpoint runs first,
subsequent WAL reservations pick a position at or after the latest
checkpoint's redo pointer.

We used a similar fix in HEAD (via commit 006dd4b2e5) and 18. The
difference is that in 17 and prior branches we need to additionally handle
the race condition with slot's minimum LSN computation during checkpoints.

Reported-by: suyu.cmj <mengjuan.cmj@alibaba-inc.com>
Author: Hou Zhijie <houzj.fnst@fujitsu.com>
Author: vignesh C <vignesh21@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Hayato Kuroda <kuroda.hayato@fujitsu.com>
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com>
Backpatch-through: 14
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5e045179-236f-4f8f-84f1-0f2566ba784c.mengjuan.cmj@alibaba-inc.com
2026-01-08 07:07:23 +00:00
0687a6eb03 Fix issue with EVENT TRIGGERS and ALTER PUBLICATION
When processing the "publish" options of an ALTER PUBLICATION command,
we call SplitIdentifierString() to split the options into a List of
strings.  Since SplitIdentifierString() modifies the delimiter
character and puts NULs in their place, this would overwrite the memory
of the AlterPublicationStmt.  Later in AlterPublicationOptions(), the
modified AlterPublicationStmt is copied for event triggers, which would
result in the event trigger only seeing the first "publish" option
rather than all options that were specified in the command.

To fix this, make a copy of the string before passing to
SplitIdentifierString().

Here we also adjust a similar case in the pgoutput plugin.  There's no
known issues caused by SplitIdentifierString() here, so this is being
done out of paranoia.

Thanks to Henson Choi for putting together an example case showing the
ALTER PUBLICATION issue.

Author: sunil s <sunilfeb26@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Henson Choi <assam258@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: zengman <zengman@halodbtech.com>
Backpatch-through: 14
2026-01-06 17:30:32 +13:00
75f3428f24 Honor GUC settings specified in CREATE SUBSCRIPTION CONNECTION.
Prior to v15, GUC settings supplied in the CONNECTION clause of
CREATE SUBSCRIPTION were correctly passed through to
the publisher's walsender. For example:

        CREATE SUBSCRIPTION mysub
            CONNECTION 'options=''-c wal_sender_timeout=1000'''
            PUBLICATION ...

would cause wal_sender_timeout to take effect on the publisher's walsender.

However, commit f3d4019da5d changed the way logical replication
connections are established, forcing the publisher's relevant
GUC settings (datestyle, intervalstyle, extra_float_digits) to
override those provided in the CONNECTION string. As a result,
from v15 through v18, GUC settings in the CONNECTION string were
always ignored.

This regression prevented per-connection tuning of logical replication.
For example, using a shorter timeout for walsender connecting
to a nearby subscriber and a longer one for walsender connecting
to a remote subscriber.

This commit restores the intended behavior by ensuring that
GUC settings in the CONNECTION string are again passed through
and applied by the walsender, allowing per-connection configuration.

Backpatch to v15, where the regression was introduced.

Author: Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chao Li <lic@highgo.com>
Reviewed-by: Kirill Reshke <reshkekirill@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Japin Li <japinli@hotmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHGQGwGYV+-abbKwdrM2UHUe-JYOFWmsrs6=QicyJO-j+-Widw@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 15
2026-01-06 11:54:46 +09:00
130b001c15 jit: Fix jit_profiling_support when unavailable.
jit_profiling_support=true captures profile data for Linux perf.  On
other platforms, LLVMCreatePerfJITEventListener() returns NULL and the
attempt to register the listener would crash.

Fix by ignoring the setting in that case.  The documentation already
says that it only has an effect if perf support is present, and we
already did the same for older LLVM versions that lacked support.

No field reports, unsurprisingly for an obscure developer-oriented
setting.  Noticed in passing while working on commit 1a28b4b4.

Backpatch-through: 14
Reviewed-by: Matheus Alcantara <matheusssilv97@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGJgB6gvrdDohgwLfCwzVQm%3DVMtb9m0vzQn%3DCwWn-kwG9w%40mail.gmail.com
2025-12-31 14:54:10 +13:00
8214667226 Fix a race condition in updating procArray->replication_slot_xmin.
Previously, ReplicationSlotsComputeRequiredXmin() computed the oldest
xmin across all slots without holding ProcArrayLock (when
already_locked is false), acquiring the lock just before updating the
replication slot xmin.

This could lead to a race condition: if a backend created a new slot
and updates the global replication slot xmin, another backend
concurrently running ReplicationSlotsComputeRequiredXmin() could
overwrite that update with an invalid or stale value. This happens
because the concurrent backend might have computed the aggregate xmin
before the new slot was accounted for, but applied the update after
the new slot had already updated the global value.

In the reported failure, a walsender for an apply worker computed
InvalidTransactionId as the oldest xmin and overwrote a valid
replication slot xmin value computed by a walsender for a tablesync
worker. Consequently, the tablesync worker computed a transaction ID
via GetOldestSafeDecodingTransactionId() effectively without
considering the replication slot xmin. This led to the error "cannot
build an initial slot snapshot as oldest safe xid %u follows
snapshot's xmin %u", which was an assertion failure prior to commit
240e0dbacd3.

To fix this, we acquire ReplicationSlotControlLock in exclusive mode
during slot creation to perform the initial update of the slot
xmin. In ReplicationSlotsComputeRequiredXmin(), we hold
ReplicationSlotControlLock in shared mode until the global slot xmin
is updated in ProcArraySetReplicationSlotXmin(). This prevents
concurrent computations and updates of the global xmin by other
backends during the initial slot xmin update process, while still
permitting concurrent calls to ReplicationSlotsComputeRequiredXmin().

Backpatch to all supported versions.

Author: Zhijie Hou <houzj.fnst@fujitsu.com>
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Pradeep Kumar <spradeepkumar29@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Hayato Kuroda (Fujitsu) <kuroda.hayato@fujitsu.com>
Reviewed-by: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-by: Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1L8wYcyTPxNzPGkhuO52WBGoOZbT0A73Le=ZUWYAYmdfw@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 14
2025-12-30 10:56:23 -08:00
dfb9ff5904 jit: Remove -Wno-deprecated-declarations in 18+.
REL_18_STABLE and master have commit ee485912, so they always use the
newer LLVM opaque pointer functions.  Drop -Wno-deprecated-declarations
(commit a56e7b660) for code under jit/llvm in those branches, to catch
any new deprecation warnings that arrive in future version of LLVM.

Older branches continued to use functions marked deprecated in LLVM 14
and 15 (ie switched to the newer functions only for LLVM 16+), as a
precaution against unforeseen compatibility problems with bitcode
already shipped.  In those branches, the comment about warning
suppression is updated to explain that situation better.  In theory we
could suppress warnings only for LLVM 14 and 15 specifically, but that
isn't done here.

Backpatch-through: 14
Reported-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1407185.1766682319%40sss.pgh.pa.us
2025-12-30 14:32:30 +13:00
c48829ed83 Fix pg_stat_get_backend_activity() to use multi-byte truncated result
pg_stat_get_backend_activity() calls pgstat_clip_activity() to ensure
that the reported query string is correctly truncated when it finishes
with an incomplete multi-byte sequence.  However, the result returned by
the function was not what pgstat_clip_activity() generated, but the
non-truncated, original, contents from PgBackendStatus.st_activity_raw.

Oversight in 54b6cd589ac2, so backpatch all the way down.

Author: Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEoWx2mDzwc48q2EK9tSXS6iJMJ35wvxNQnHX+rXjy5VgLvJQw@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 14
2025-12-27 17:23:54 +09:00
63a65adf4d Don't advance origin during apply failure.
The logical replication parallel apply worker could incorrectly advance
the origin progress during an error or failed apply. This behavior risks
transaction loss because such transactions will not be resent by the
server.

Commit 3f28b2fcac addressed a similar issue for both the apply worker and
the table sync worker by registering a before_shmem_exit callback to reset
origin information. This prevents the worker from advancing the origin
during transaction abortion on shutdown. This patch applies the same fix
to the parallel apply worker, ensuring consistent behavior across all
worker types.

As with 3f28b2fcac, we are backpatching through version 16, since parallel
apply mode was introduced there and the issue only occurs when changes are
applied before the transaction end record (COMMIT or ABORT) is received.

Author: Hou Zhijie <houzj.fnst@fujitsu.com>
Reviewed-by: Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com>
Backpatch-through: 16
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/TY4PR01MB169078771FB31B395AB496A6B94B4A@TY4PR01MB16907.jpnprd01.prod.outlook.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/TYAPR01MB5692FAC23BE40C69DA8ED4AFF5B92@TYAPR01MB5692.jpnprd01.prod.outlook.com
2025-12-24 04:19:57 +00:00
7efef18ffc Fix bug in following update chain when locking a heap tuple
After waiting for a concurrent updater to finish, heap_lock_tuple()
followed the update chain to lock all tuple versions. However, when
stepping from the initial tuple to the next one, it failed to check
that the next tuple's XMIN matches the initial tuple's XMAX. That's an
important check whenever following an update chain, and the recursive
part that follows the chain did it, but the initial step missed it.
Without the check, if the updating transaction aborts, the updated
tuple is vacuumed away and replaced by an unrelated tuple, the
unrelated tuple might get incorrectly locked.

Author: Jasper Smit <jasper.smit@servicenow.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAOG+RQ74x0q=kgBBQ=mezuvOeZBfSxM1qu_o0V28bwDz3dHxLw@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 14
2025-12-23 13:37:27 +02:00
e22e9ab0cd Fix orphaned origin in shared memory after DROP SUBSCRIPTION
Since ce0fdbfe9722, a replication slot and an origin are created by each
tablesync worker, whose information is stored in both a catalog and
shared memory (once the origin is set up in the latter case).  The
transaction where the origin is created is the same as the one that runs
the initial COPY, with the catalog state of the origin becoming visible
for other sessions only once the COPY transaction has committed.  The
catalog state is coupled with a state in shared memory, initialized at
the same time as the origin created in the catalogs.  Note that the
transaction doing the initial data sync can take a long time, time that
depends on the amount of data to transfer from a publication node to its
subscriber node.

Now, when a DROP SUBSCRIPTION is executed, all its workers are stopped
with the origins removed.  The removal of each origin relies on a
catalog lookup.  A worker still running the initial COPY would fail its
transaction, with the catalog state of the origin rolled back while the
shared memory state remains around.  The session running the DROP
SUBSCRIPTION should be in charge of cleaning up the catalog and the
shared memory state, but as there is no data in the catalogs the shared
memory state is not removed.  This issue would leave orphaned origin
data in shared memory, leading to a confusing state as it would still
show up in pg_replication_origin_status.  Note that this shared memory
data is sticky, being flushed on disk in replorigin_checkpoint at
checkpoint.  This prevents other origins from reusing a slot position
in the shared memory data.

To address this problem, the commit moves the creation of the origin at
the end of the transaction that precedes the one executing the initial
COPY, making the origin immediately visible in the catalogs for other
sessions, giving DROP SUBSCRIPTION a way to know about it.  A different
solution would have been to clean up the shared memory state using an
abort callback within the tablesync worker.  The solution of this commit
is more consistent with the apply worker that creates an origin in a
short transaction.

A test is added in the subscription test 004_sync.pl, which was able to
display the problem.  The test fails when this commit is reverted.

Reported-by: Tenglong Gu <brucegu@amazon.com>
Reported-by: Daisuke Higuchi <higudai@amazon.com>
Analyzed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Author: Hou Zhijie <houzj.fnst@fujitsu.com>
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/aUTekQTg4OYnw-Co@paquier.xyz
Backpatch-through: 14
2025-12-23 14:32:22 +09:00
3853f61681 Add guard to prevent recursive memory context logging.
Previously, if memory context logging was triggered repeatedly and
rapidly while a previous request was still being processed, it could
result in recursive calls to ProcessLogMemoryContextInterrupt().
This could lead to infinite recursion and potentially crash the process.

This commit adds a guard to prevent such recursion.
If ProcessLogMemoryContextInterrupt() is already in progress and
logging memory contexts, subsequent calls will exit immediately,
avoiding unintended recursive calls.

While this scenario is unlikely in practice, it's not impossible.
This change adds a safety check to prevent such failures.

Back-patch to v14, where memory context logging was introduced.

Reported-by: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>
Author: Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Atsushi Torikoshi <torikoshia@oss.nttdata.com>
Reviewed-by: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Artem Gavrilov <artem.gavrilov@percona.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoZMrv32tbNRrFTvF9iWLnTGqbhYSLVcrHGuwZvCtph0NA@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 14
2025-12-19 12:08:20 +09:00
a5277700e4 Do not emit WAL for unlogged BRIN indexes
Operations on unlogged relations should not be WAL-logged. The
brin_initialize_empty_new_buffer() function didn't get the memo.

The function is only called when a concurrent update to a brin page
uses up space that we're just about to insert to, which makes it
pretty hard to hit. If you do manage to hit it, a full-page WAL record
is erroneously emitted for the unlogged index. If you then crash,
crash recovery will fail on that record with an error like this:

    FATAL:  could not create file "base/5/32819": File exists

Author: Kirill Reshke <reshkekirill@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CALdSSPhpZXVFnWjwEBNcySx_vXtXHwB2g99gE6rK0uRJm-3GgQ@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 14
2025-12-18 15:09:21 +02:00
27e4fad980 Assert lack of hazardous buffer locks before possible catalog read.
Commit 0bada39c83a150079567a6e97b1a25a198f30ea3 fixed a bug of this kind,
which existed in all branches for six days before detection.  While the
probability of reaching the trouble was low, the disruption was extreme.  No
new backends could start, and service restoration needed an immediate
shutdown.  Hence, add this to catch the next bug like it.

The new check in RelationIdGetRelation() suffices to make autovacuum detect
the bug in commit 243e9b40f1b2dd09d6e5bf91ebf6e822a2cd3704 that led to commit
0bada39.  This also checks in a number of similar places.  It replaces each
Assert(IsTransactionState()) that pertained to a conditional catalog read.

Back-patch to v14 - v17.  This a back-patch of commit
f4ece891fc2f3f96f0571720a1ae30db8030681b (from before v18 branched) to
all supported branches, to accompany the back-patch of commits 243e9b4
and 0bada39.  For catalog indexes, the bttextcmp() behavior that
motivated IsCatalogTextUniqueIndexOid() was v18-specific.  Hence, this
back-patch doesn't need that or its correction from commit
4a4ee0c2c1e53401924101945ac3d517c0a8a559.

Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin <exclusion@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20250410191830.0e.nmisch@google.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/10ec0bc3-5933-1189-6bb8-5dec4114558e@gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 14-17
2025-12-16 16:13:55 -08:00
720e9304fa WAL-log inplace update before revealing it to other sessions.
A buffer lock won't stop a reader having already checked tuple
visibility.  If a vac_update_datfrozenid() and then a crash happened
during inplace update of a relfrozenxid value, datfrozenxid could
overtake relfrozenxid.  That could lead to "could not access status of
transaction" errors.

Back-patch to v14 - v17.  This is a back-patch of commits:

- 8e7e672cdaa6bfec85d4d5dd9be84159df23bb41
  (main change, on master, before v18 branched)
- 818013665259d4242ba641aad705ebe5a3e2db8e
  (defect fix, on master, before v18 branched)

It reverses commit bc6bad88572501aecaa2ac5d4bc900ac0fd457d5, my revert
of the original back-patch.

In v14, this also back-patches the assertion removal from commit
7fcf2faf9c7dd473208fd6d5565f88d7f733782b.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20240620012908.92.nmisch@google.com
Backpatch-through: 14-17
2025-12-16 16:13:55 -08:00
1d7b02711f For inplace update, send nontransactional invalidations.
The inplace update survives ROLLBACK.  The inval didn't, so another
backend's DDL could then update the row without incorporating the
inplace update.  In the test this fixes, a mix of CREATE INDEX and ALTER
TABLE resulted in a table with an index, yet relhasindex=f.  That is a
source of index corruption.

Back-patch to v14 - v17.  This is a back-patch of commits:

- 243e9b40f1b2dd09d6e5bf91ebf6e822a2cd3704
  (main change, on master, before v18 branched)
- 0bada39c83a150079567a6e97b1a25a198f30ea3
  (defect fix, on master, before v18 branched)
- bae8ca82fd00603ebafa0658640d6e4dfe20af92
  (cosmetics from post-commit review, on REL_18_STABLE)

It reverses commit c1099dd745b0135960895caa8892a1873ac6cbe5, my revert
of the original back-patch of 243e9b4.

This back-patch omits the non-comment heap_decode() changes.  I find
those changes removed harmless code that was last necessary in v13.  See
discussion thread for details.  The back branches aren't the place to
remove such code.

Like the original back-patch, this doesn't change WAL, because these
branches use end-of-recovery SIResetAll().  All branches change the ABI
of extern function PrepareToInvalidateCacheTuple().  No PGXN extension
calls that, and there's no apparent use case in extensions.  Expect
".abi-compliance-history" edits to follow.

Reviewed-by: Paul A Jungwirth <pj@illuminatedcomputing.com>
Reviewed-by: Surya Poondla <s_poondla@apple.com>
Reviewed-by: Ilyasov Ian <ianilyasov@outlook.com>
Reviewed-by: Nitin Motiani <nitinmotiani@google.com> (in earlier versions)
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> (in earlier versions)
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20240523000548.58.nmisch@google.com
Backpatch-through: 14-17
2025-12-16 16:13:55 -08:00
ed75434c45 Reorder two functions in inval.c
This file separates public and static functions with a separator
comment, but two routines were not defined in a location reflecting
that, so reorder them.

Back-patch commit c2bdd2c5b1d48a7e39e1a8d5e1d90b731b53c4c9 to v15 - v16.
This avoids merge conflicts in the next commit, which modifies a
function this moved.  Exclude v14, which is so different that the merge
conflict savings would be immaterial.

Author: Aleksander Alekseev <aleksander@timescale.com>
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@kurilemu.de>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJ7c6TMX2dd0g91UKvcC+CVygKQYJkKJq1+ZzT4rOK42+b53=w@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 15-16
2025-12-16 16:13:55 -08:00
12c2f843cd Switch memory contexts in ReinitializeParallelDSM.
We already do this in CreateParallelContext, InitializeParallelDSM, and
LaunchParallelWorkers. I suspect the reason why the matching logic was
omitted from ReinitializeParallelDSM is that I failed to realize that
any memory allocation was happening here -- but shm_mq_attach does
allocate, which could result in a shm_mq_handle being allocated in a
shorter-lived context than the ParallelContext which points to it.

That could result in a crash if the shorter-lived context is freed
before the parallel context is destroyed. As far as I am currently
aware, there is no way to reach a crash using only code that is
present in core PostgreSQL, but extensions could potentially trip
over this. Fixing this in the back-branches appears low-risk, so
back-patch to all supported versions.

Author: Jakub Wartak <jakub.wartak@enterprisedb.com>
Co-authored-by: Jeevan Chalke <jeevan.chalke@enterprisedb.com>
Backpatch-through: 14
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAKZiRmwfVripa3FGo06=5D1EddpsLu9JY2iJOTgbsxUQ339ogQ@mail.gmail.com
2025-12-16 10:59:02 -05:00
1aa57e9ed5 Fail recovery when missing redo checkpoint record without backup_label
This commit adds an extra check at the beginning of recovery to ensure
that the redo record of a checkpoint exists before attempting WAL
replay, logging a PANIC if the redo record referenced by the checkpoint
record could not be found.  This is the same level of failure as when a
checkpoint record is missing.  This check is added when a cluster is
started without a backup_label, after retrieving its checkpoint record.
The redo LSN used for the check is retrieved from the checkpoint record
successfully read.

In the case where a backup_label exists, the startup process already
fails if the redo record cannot be found after reading a checkpoint
record at the beginning of recovery.

Previously, the presence of the redo record was not checked.  If the
redo and checkpoint records were located on different WAL segments, it
would be possible to miss a entire range of WAL records that should have
been replayed but were just ignored.  The consequences of missing the
redo record depend on the version dealt with, these becoming worse the
older the version used:
- On HEAD, v18 and v17, recovery fails with a pointer dereference at the
beginning of the redo loop, as the redo record is expected but cannot be
found.  These versions are good students, because we detect a failure
before doing anything, even if the failure is misleading in the shape of
a segmentation fault, giving no information that the redo record is
missing.
- In v16 and v15, problems show at the end of recovery within
FinishWalRecovery(), the startup process using a buggy LSN to decide
from where to start writing WAL.  The cluster gets corrupted, still it
is noisy about it.
- v14 and older versions are worse: a cluster gets corrupted but it is
entirely silent about the matter.  The redo record missing causes the
startup process to skip entirely recovery, because a missing record is
the same as not redo being required at all.  This leads to data loss, as
everything is missed between the redo record and the checkpoint record.

Note that I have tested that down to 9.4, reproducing the issue with a
version of the author's reproducer slightly modified.  The code is wrong
since at least 9.2, but I did not look at the exact point of origin.

This problem has been found by debugging a cluster where the WAL segment
including the redo segment was missing due to an operator error, leading
to a crash, based on an investigation in v15.

Requesting archive recovery with the creation of a recovery.signal or
a standby.signal even without a backup_label would mitigate the issue:
if the record cannot be found in pg_wal/, the missing segment can be
retrieved with a restore_command when checking that the redo record
exists.  This was already the case without this commit, where recovery
would re-fetch the WAL segment that includes the redo record.  The check
introduced by this commit makes the segment to be retrieved earlier to
make sure that the redo record can be found.

On HEAD, the code will be slightly changed in a follow-up commit to not
rely on a PANIC, to include a test able to emulate the original problem.
This is a minimal backpatchable fix, kept separated for clarity.

Reported-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Analyzed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Author: Nitin Jadhav <nitinjadhavpostgres@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20231023232145.cmqe73stvivsmlhs@awork3.anarazel.de
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMm1aWaaJi2w49c0RiaDBfhdCL6ztbr9m=daGqiOuVdizYWYaA@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 14
2025-12-16 13:29:41 +09:00
7d42e2367c Clarify comment on multixid offset wraparound check
Coverity complained that offset cannot be 0 here because there's an
explicit check for "offset == 0" earlier in the function, but it
didn't see the possibility that offset could've wrapped around to 0.
The code is correct, but clarify the comment about it.

The same code exists in backbranches in the server
GetMultiXactIdMembers() function and in 'master' in the pg_upgrade
GetOldMultiXactIdSingleMember function. In backbranches Coverity
didn't complain about it because the check was merely an assertion,
but change the comment in all supported branches for consistency.

Per Tom Lane's suggestion.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/1827755.1765752936@sss.pgh.pa.us
2025-12-15 11:48:02 +02:00
5a4dc4aabd Fix allocation formula in llvmjit_expr.c
An array of LLVMBasicBlockRef is allocated with the size used for an
element being "LLVMBasicBlockRef *" rather than "LLVMBasicBlockRef".
LLVMBasicBlockRef is a type that refers to a pointer, so this did not
directly cause a problem because both should have the same size, still
it is incorrect.

This issue has been spotted while reviewing a different patch, and
exists since 2a0faed9d702, so backpatch all the way down.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+hUKGLngd9cKHtTUuUdEo2eWEgUcZ_EQRbP55MigV2t_zTReg@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 14
2025-12-11 10:25:48 +09:00
08e1ea3b28 Doc: fix typo in hash index documentation
Plus a similar fix to the README.

Backpatch as far back as the sgml issue exists.  The README issue does
exist in v14, but that seems unlikely to harm anyone.

Author: David Geier <geidav.pg@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ed3db7ea-55b4-4809-86af-81ad3bb2c7d3@gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 15
2025-12-09 14:43:03 +13:00
4d689a1769 Fix setting next multixid's offset at offset wraparound
In commit 789d65364c, we started updating the next multixid's offset
too when recording a multixid, so that it can always be used to
calculate the number of members. I got it wrong at offset wraparound:
we need to skip over offset 0. Fix that.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/d9996478-389a-4340-8735-bfad456b313c@iki.fi
Backpatch-through: 14
2025-12-05 11:36:36 +02:00
6351669130 Set next multixid's offset when creating a new multixid
With this commit, the next multixid's offset will always be set on the
offsets page, by the time that a backend might try to read it, so we
no longer need the waiting mechanism with the condition variable. In
other words, this eliminates "corner case 2" mentioned in the
comments.

The waiting mechanism was broken in a few scenarios:

- When nextMulti was advanced without WAL-logging the next
  multixid. For example, if a later multixid was already assigned and
  WAL-logged before the previous one was WAL-logged, and then the
  server crashed. In that case the next offset would never be set in
  the offsets SLRU, and a query trying to read it would get stuck
  waiting for it. Same thing could happen if pg_resetwal was used to
  forcibly advance nextMulti.

- In hot standby mode, a deadlock could happen where one backend waits
  for the next multixid assignment record, but WAL replay is not
  advancing because of a recovery conflict with the waiting backend.

The old TAP test used carefully placed injection points to exercise
the old waiting code, but now that the waiting code is gone, much of
the old test is no longer relevant. Rewrite the test to reproduce the
IPC/MultixactCreation hang after crash recovery instead, and to verify
that previously recorded multixids stay readable.

Backpatch to all supported versions. In back-branches, we still need
to be able to read WAL that was generated before this fix, so in the
back-branches this includes a hack to initialize the next offsets page
when replaying XLOG_MULTIXACT_CREATE_ID for the last multixid on a
page. On 'master', bump XLOG_PAGE_MAGIC instead to indicate that the
WAL is not compatible.

Author: Andrey Borodin <amborodin@acm.org>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Yurichev <dsy.075@yandex.ru>
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@kurilemu.de>
Reviewed-by: Kirill Reshke <reshkekirill@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ivan Bykov <i.bykov@modernsys.ru>
Reviewed-by: Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/172e5723-d65f-4eec-b512-14beacb326ce@yandex.ru
Backpatch-through: 14
2025-12-03 19:15:24 +02:00
4d288e33b9 Avoid rewriting data-modifying CTEs more than once.
Formerly, when updating an auto-updatable view, or a relation with
rules, if the original query had any data-modifying CTEs, the rewriter
would rewrite those CTEs multiple times as RewriteQuery() recursed
into the product queries. In most cases that was harmless, because
RewriteQuery() is mostly idempotent. However, if the CTE involved
updating an always-generated column, it would trigger an error because
any subsequent rewrite would appear to be attempting to assign a
non-default value to the always-generated column.

This could perhaps be fixed by attempting to make RewriteQuery() fully
idempotent, but that looks quite tricky to achieve, and would probably
be quite fragile, given that more generated-column-type features might
be added in the future.

Instead, fix by arranging for RewriteQuery() to rewrite each CTE
exactly once (by tracking the number of CTEs already rewritten as it
recurses). This has the advantage of being simpler and more efficient,
but it does make RewriteQuery() dependent on the order in which
rewriteRuleAction() joins the CTE lists from the original query and
the rule action, so care must be taken if that is ever changed.

Reported-by: Bernice Southey <bernice.southey@gmail.com>
Author: Bernice Southey <bernice.southey@gmail.com>
Author: Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Reviewed-by: Kirill Reshke <reshkekirill@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEDh4nyD6MSH9bROhsOsuTqGAv_QceU_GDvN9WcHLtZTCYM1kA@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 14
2025-11-29 12:33:04 +00:00
b497766a8e Allow indexscans on partial hash indexes with implied quals.
Normally, if a WHERE clause is implied by the predicate of a partial
index, we drop that clause from the set of quals used with the index,
since it's redundant to test it if we're scanning that index.
However, if it's a hash index (or any !amoptionalkey index), this
could result in dropping all available quals for the index's first
key, preventing us from generating an indexscan.

It's fair to question the practical usefulness of this case.  Since
hash only supports equality quals, the situation could only arise
if the index's predicate is "WHERE indexkey = constant", implying
that the index contains only one hash value, which would make hash
a really poor choice of index type.  However, perhaps there are
other !amoptionalkey index AMs out there with which such cases are
more plausible.

To fix, just don't filter the candidate indexquals this way if
the index is !amoptionalkey.  That's a bit hokey because it may
result in testing quals we didn't need to test, but to do it
more accurately we'd have to redundantly identify which candidate
quals are actually usable with the index, something we don't know
at this early stage of planning.  Doesn't seem worth the effort.

Reported-by: Sergei Glukhov <s.glukhov@postgrespro.ru>
Author: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Reviewed-by: David Rowley <dgrowleyml@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/e200bf38-6b45-446a-83fd-48617211feff@postgrespro.ru
Backpatch-through: 14
2025-11-27 13:09:59 -05:00
89c8a1b906 lwlock: Fix, currently harmless, bug in LWLockWakeup()
Accidentally the code in LWLockWakeup() checked the list of to-be-woken up
processes to see if LW_FLAG_HAS_WAITERS should be unset. That means that
HAS_WAITERS would not get unset immediately, but only during the next,
unnecessary, call to LWLockWakeup().

Luckily, as the code stands, this is just a small efficiency issue.

However, if there were (as in a patch of mine) a case in which LWLockWakeup()
would not find any backend to wake, despite the wait list not being empty,
we'd wrongly unset LW_FLAG_HAS_WAITERS, leading to potentially hanging.

While the consequences in the backbranches are limited, the code as-is
confusing, and it is possible that there are workloads where the additional
wait list lock acquisitions hurt, therefore backpatch.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/fvfmkr5kk4nyex56ejgxj3uzi63isfxovp2biecb4bspbjrze7@az2pljabhnff
Backpatch-through: 14
2025-11-24 17:39:58 -05:00
600acd34b0 jit: Adjust AArch64-only code for LLVM 21.
LLVM 21 changed the arguments of RTDyldObjectLinkingLayer's
constructor, breaking compilation with the backported
SectionMemoryManager from commit 9044fc1d.

cd585864c0

Backpatch-through: 14
Author: Holger Hoffstätte <holger@applied-asynchrony.com>
Reviewed-by: Anthonin Bonnefoy <anthonin.bonnefoy@datadoghq.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/d25e6e4a-d1b4-84d3-2f8a-6c45b975f53d%40applied-asynchrony.com
2025-11-22 21:23:23 +13:00
1c8c3206f4 Don't allow CTEs to determine semantic levels of aggregates.
The fix for bug #19055 (commit b0cc0a71e) allowed CTE references in
sub-selects within aggregate functions to affect the semantic levels
assigned to such aggregates.  It turns out this broke some related
cases, leading to assertion failures or strange planner errors such
as "unexpected outer reference in CTE query".  After experimenting
with some alternative rules for assigning the semantic level in
such cases, we've come to the conclusion that changing the level
is more likely to break things than be helpful.

Therefore, this patch undoes what b0cc0a71e changed, and instead
installs logic to throw an error if there is any reference to a
CTE that's below the semantic level that standard SQL rules would
assign to the aggregate based on its contained Var and Aggref nodes.
(The SQL standard disallows sub-selects within aggregate functions,
so it can't reach the troublesome case and hence has no rule for
what to do.)

Perhaps someone will come along with a legitimate query that this
logic rejects, and if so probably the example will help us craft
a level-adjustment rule that works better than what b0cc0a71e did.
I'm not holding my breath for that though, because the previous
logic had been there for a very long time before bug #19055 without
complaints, and that bug report sure looks to have originated from
fuzzing not from real usage.

Like b0cc0a71e, back-patch to all supported branches, though
sadly that no longer includes v13.

Bug: #19106
Reported-by: Kamil Monicz <kamil@monicz.dev>
Author: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/19106-9dd3668a0734cd72@postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 14
2025-11-18 12:56:55 -05:00
a1407daded Define PS_USE_CLOBBER_ARGV on GNU/Hurd.
Until d2ea2d310dfdc40328aca5b6c52225de78432e01, the PS_USE_PS_STRINGS
option was used on the GNU/Hurd. As this option got removed and
PS_USE_CLOBBER_ARGV appears to work fine nowadays on the Hurd, define
this one to re-enable process title changes on this platform.

In the 14 and 15 branches, the existing test for __hurd__ (added 25
years ago by commit 209aa77d, removed in 16 by the above commit) is left
unchanged for now as it was activating slightly different code paths and
would need investigation by a Hurd user.

Author: Michael Banck <mbanck@debian.org>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGJMNGUAqf27WbckYFrM-Mavy0RKJvocfJU%3DJ2XcAZyv%2Bw%40mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 16
2025-11-17 12:48:22 +13:00
414e1ece9d Add note about CreateStatistics()'s selective use of check_rights.
Commit 5e4fcbe531 added a check_rights parameter to this function
for use by ALTER TABLE commands that re-create statistics objects.
However, we intentionally ignore check_rights when verifying
relation ownership because this function's lookup could return a
different answer than the caller's.  This commit adds a note to
this effect so that we remember it down the road.

Reviewed-by: Noah Misch <noah@leadboat.com>
Backpatch-through: 14
2025-11-14 13:20:09 -06:00
0e8eaa2181 Clear 'xid' in dummy async notify entries written to fill up pages
Before we started to freeze async notify entries (commit 8eeb4a0f7c),
no one looked at the 'xid' on an entry with invalid 'dboid'. But now
we might actually need to freeze it later. Initialize them with
InvalidTransactionId to begin with, to avoid that work later.

Álvaro pointed this out in review of commit 8eeb4a0f7c, but I forgot
to include this change there.

Author: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@kurilemu.de>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/202511071410.52ll56eyixx7@alvherre.pgsql
Backpatch-through: 14
2025-11-12 21:27:05 +02:00
44e8c60be6 Fix remaining race condition with CLOG truncation and LISTEN/NOTIFY
Previous commit fixed a bug where VACUUM would truncate the CLOG
that's still needed to check the commit status of XIDs in the async
notify queue, but as mentioned in the commit message, it wasn't a full
fix. If a backend is executing asyncQueueReadAllNotifications() and
has just made a local copy of an async SLRU page which contains old
XIDs, vacuum can concurrently truncate the CLOG covering those XIDs,
and the backend still gets an error when it calls
TransactionIdDidCommit() on those XIDs in the local copy. This commit
fixes that race condition.

To fix, hold the SLRU bank lock across the TransactionIdDidCommit()
calls in NOTIFY processing.

Per Tom Lane's idea. Backpatch to all supported versions.

Reviewed-by: Joel Jacobson <joel@compiler.org>
Reviewed-by: Arseniy Mukhin <arseniy.mukhin.dev@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/2759499.1761756503@sss.pgh.pa.us
Backpatch-through: 14
2025-11-12 21:01:45 +02:00
053e1868b7 Fix bug where we truncated CLOG that was still needed by LISTEN/NOTIFY
The async notification queue contains the XID of the sender, and when
processing notifications we call TransactionIdDidCommit() on the
XID. But we had no safeguards to prevent the CLOG segments containing
those XIDs from being truncated away. As a result, if a backend didn't
for some reason process its notifications for a long time, or when a
new backend issued LISTEN, you could get an error like:

test=# listen c21;
ERROR:  58P01: could not access status of transaction 14279685
DETAIL:  Could not open file "pg_xact/000D": No such file or directory.
LOCATION:  SlruReportIOError, slru.c:1087

To fix, make VACUUM "freeze" the XIDs in the async notification queue
before truncating the CLOG. Old XIDs are replaced with
FrozenTransactionId or InvalidTransactionId.

Note: This commit is not a full fix. A race condition remains, where a
backend is executing asyncQueueReadAllNotifications() and has just
made a local copy of an async SLRU page which contains old XIDs, while
vacuum concurrently truncates the CLOG covering those XIDs. When the
backend then calls TransactionIdDidCommit() on those XIDs from the
local copy, you still get the error. The next commit will fix that
remaining race condition.

This was first reported by Sergey Zhuravlev in 2021, with many other
people hitting the same issue later. Thanks to:
- Alexandra Wang, Daniil Davydov, Andrei Varashen and Jacques Combrink
  for investigating and providing reproducable test cases,
- Matheus Alcantara and Arseniy Mukhin for review and earlier proposed
  patches to fix this,
- Álvaro Herrera and Masahiko Sawada for reviews,
- Yura Sokolov aka funny-falcon for the idea of marking transactions
  as committed in the notification queue, and
- Joel Jacobson for the final patch version. I hope I didn't forget
  anyone.

Backpatch to all supported versions. I believe the bug goes back all
the way to commit d1e027221d, which introduced the SLRU-based async
notification queue.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/16961-25f29f95b3604a8a@postgresql.org
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/18804-bccbbde5e77a68c2@postgresql.org
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAK98qZ3wZLE-RZJN_Y%2BTFjiTRPPFPBwNBpBi5K5CU8hUHkzDpw@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 14
2025-11-12 21:01:42 +02:00
c1a5bde003 Escalate ERRORs during async notify processing to FATAL
Previously, if async notify processing encountered an error, we would
report the error to the client and advance our read position past the
offending entry to prevent trying to process it over and over
again. Trying to continue after an error has a few problems however:

- We have no way of telling the client that a notification was
  lost. They get an ERROR, but that doesn't tell you much. As such,
  it's not clear if keeping the connection alive after losing a
  notification is a good thing. Depending on the application logic,
  missing a notification could cause the application to get stuck
  waiting, for example.

- If the connection is idle, PqCommReadingMsg is set and any ERROR is
  turned into FATAL anyway.

- We bailed out of the notification processing loop on first error
  without processing any subsequent notifications. The subsequent
  notifications would not be processed until another notify interrupt
  arrives. For example, if there were two notifications pending, and
  processing the first one caused an ERROR, the second notification
  would not be processed until someone sent a new NOTIFY.

This commit changes the behavior so that any ERROR while processing
async notifications is turned into FATAL, causing the client
connection to be terminated. That makes the behavior more consistent
as that's what happened in idle state already, and terminating the
connection is a clear signal to the application that it might've
missed some notifications.

The reason to do this now is that the next commits will change the
notification processing code in a way that would make it harder to
skip over just the offending notification entry on error.

Reviewed-by: Matheus Alcantara <matheusssilv97@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@kurilemu.de>
Reviewed-by: Arseniy Mukhin <arseniy.mukhin.dev@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/fedbd908-4571-4bbe-b48e-63bfdcc38f64@iki.fi
Backpatch-through: 14
2025-11-12 21:01:39 +02:00
995c971832 Fix range for commit_siblings in sample conf
The range for commit_siblings was incorrectly listed as starting on 1
instead of 0 in the sample configuration file.  Backpatch down to all
supported branches.

Author: Man Zeng <zengman@halodbtech.com>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/tencent_53B70BA72303AE9C6889E78E@qq.com
Backpatch-through: 14
2025-11-12 13:51:53 +01:00
d20abb5876 Check for CREATE privilege on the schema in CREATE STATISTICS.
This omission allowed table owners to create statistics in any
schema, potentially leading to unexpected naming conflicts.  For
ALTER TABLE commands that require re-creating statistics objects,
skip this check in case the user has since lost CREATE on the
schema.  The addition of a second parameter to CreateStatistics()
breaks ABI compatibility, but we are unaware of any impacted
third-party code.

Reported-by: Jelte Fennema-Nio <postgres@jeltef.nl>
Author: Jelte Fennema-Nio <postgres@jeltef.nl>
Co-authored-by: Nathan Bossart <nathandbossart@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Noah Misch <noah@leadboat.com>
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@kurilemu.de>
Security: CVE-2025-12817
Backpatch-through: 13
2025-11-10 09:00:00 -06:00
45367761a0 Translation updates
Source-Git-URL: https://git.postgresql.org/git/pgtranslation/messages.git
Source-Git-Hash: d3bc33cce36158257311e5cfa36c97209f37dedc
2025-11-10 13:04:09 +01:00
26958f4d99 Disallow generated columns in COPY WHERE clause
Stored generated columns are not yet computed when the filtering
happens, so we need to prohibit them to avoid incorrect behavior.

Co-authored-by: jian he <jian.universality@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kirill Reshke <reshkekirill@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CACJufxHb8YPQ095R_pYDr77W9XKNaXg5Rzy-WP525mkq+hRM3g@mail.gmail.com
2025-11-06 14:01:57 +01:00
98821eae9d Update obsolete comment in ExecScanReScan().
Commit 27cc7cd2b removed the epqScanDone flag from the EState struct,
and instead added an equivalent flag named relsubs_done to the EPQState
struct; but it failed to update this comment.

Author: Etsuro Fujita <etsuro.fujita@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPmGK152zJ3fU5avDT5udfL0namrDeVfMTL3dxdOXw28SOrycg%40mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 13
2025-11-06 12:25:02 +09:00