This feature set did not handle empty ranges correctly, and it's now
too late for PostgreSQL 17 to fix it.
The following commits are reverted:
6db4598fcb8 Add stratnum GiST support function
46a0cd4cefb Add temporal PRIMARY KEY and UNIQUE constraints
86232a49a43 Fix comment on gist_stratnum_btree
030e10ff1a3 Rename pg_constraint.conwithoutoverlaps to conperiod
a88c800deb6 Use daterange and YMD in without_overlaps tests instead of tsrange.
5577a71fb0c Use half-open interval notation in without_overlaps tests
34768ee3616 Add temporal FOREIGN KEY contraints
482e108cd38 Add test for REPLICA IDENTITY with a temporal key
c3db1f30cba doc: clarify PERIOD and WITHOUT OVERLAPS in CREATE TABLE
144c2ce0cc7 Fix ON CONFLICT DO NOTHING/UPDATE for temporal indexes
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/d0b64a7a-dfe4-4b84-a906-c7dedfa40a3e@eisentraut.org
Run renumber_oids.pl to move high-numbered OIDs down, as per pre-beta
tasks specified by RELEASE_CHANGES. For reference, the command was
./renumber_oids.pl --first-mapped-oid 8000 --target-oid 6300
Run pgindent, pgperltidy, and reformat-dat-files.
The pgindent part of this is pretty small, consisting mainly of
fixing up self-inflicted formatting damage from patches that
hadn't bothered to add their new typedefs to typedefs.list.
In order to keep it from making anything worse, I manually added
a dozen or so typedefs that appeared in the existing typedefs.list
but not in the buildfarm's list. Perhaps we should formalize that,
or better find a way to get those typedefs into the automatic list.
pgperltidy is as opinionated as always, and reformat-dat-files too.
COMMAND_TAG_NEXTTAG isn't really a valid command tag. Declaring it
as if it were one prompts complaints from Coverity and perhaps other
static analyzers. Our only use of it is in an entirely-unnecessary
array sizing declaration, so let's just drop it.
Ranier Vilela
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEudQAoY0xrKuTAX7W10zsjjUpKBPFRtdCyScb3Z0FB2v6HNmQ@mail.gmail.com
There are some problems with the new way to handle these constraints
that were detected at the last minute, and require fixes that appear too
invasive to be doing this late in the cycle. Revert this (again) for
now, we'll try again with these problems fixed.
The following commits are reverted:
b0e96f311985 Catalog not-null constraints
9b581c534186 Disallow changing NO INHERIT status of a not-null constraint
d0ec2ddbe088 Fix not-null constraint test
ac22a9545ca9 Move privilege check to the right place
b0f7dd915bca Check stack depth in new recursive functions
3af721794272 Update information_schema definition for not-null constraints
c3709100be73 Fix propagating attnotnull in multiple inheritance
d9f686a72ee9 Fix restore of not-null constraints with inheritance
d72d32f52d26 Don't try to assign smart names to constraints
0cd711271d42 Better handle indirect constraint drops
13daa33fa5a6 Disallow NO INHERIT not-null constraints on partitioned tables
d45597f72fe5 Disallow direct change of NO INHERIT of not-null constraints
21ac38f498b3 Fix inconsistencies in error messages
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/202405110940.joxlqcx4dogd@alvherre.pgsql
This commit extends the backend-side infrastructure of injection points
so as it becomes possible to register some input data when attaching a
point. This private data can be registered with the function name and
the library name of the callback when attaching a point, then it is
given as input argument to the callback. This gives the possibility for
modules to pass down custom data at runtime when attaching a point
without managing that internally, in a manner consistent with the
callback entry retrieved from the hash shmem table storing the injection
point data.
InjectionPointAttach() gains two arguments, to be able to define the
private data contents and its size.
A follow-up commit will rely on this infrastructure to close a race
condition with the injection point detach in the module
injection_points.
While on it, this changes InjectionPointDetach() to return a boolean,
returning false if a point cannot be detached. This has been mentioned
by Noah as useful when it comes to implement more complex tests with
concurrent point detach, solid with the automatic detach done for local
points in the test module.
Documentation is adjusted in consequence.
Per discussion with Noah Misch.
Reviewed-by: Noah Misch
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20240509031553.47@rfd.leadboat.com
It turns out that we broke this in commit e5bc9454e, because
the code was assuming that no dependent types would appear
among the extension's direct dependencies, and now they do.
This isn't terribly hard to fix: just skip dependent types,
expecting that we will recurse to them when we process the parent
object (which should also be among the direct dependencies).
But a little bit of refactoring is needed so that we can avoid
duplicating logic about what is a dependent type.
Although there is some testing of ALTER EXTENSION SET SCHEMA,
it failed to cover interesting cases, so add more tests.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/930191.1715205151@sss.pgh.pa.us
When changing the data type of a column of a partitioned table, craft
the ALTER SEQUENCE command only once. Partitions do not have identity
sequences of their own and thus do not need a ALTER SEQUENCE command
for each partition.
Fix getIdentitySequence() to fetch the identity sequence associated
with the top-level partitioned table when a Relation of a partition is
passed to it. While doing so, translate the attribute number of the
partition into the attribute number of the partitioned table.
Author: Ashutosh Bapat <ashutosh.bapat@enterprisedb.com>
Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin <exclusion@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Dolgov <9erthalion6@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/3b8a9dc1-bbc7-0ef5-6863-c432afac7d59@gmail.com
The catalog view pg_stats_ext fails to consider privileges for
expression statistics. The catalog view pg_stats_ext_exprs fails
to consider privileges and row-level security policies. To fix,
restrict the data in these views to table owners or roles that
inherit privileges of the table owner. It may be possible to apply
less restrictive privilege checks in some cases, but that is left
as a future exercise. Furthermore, for pg_stats_ext_exprs, do not
return data for tables with row-level security enabled, as is
already done for pg_stats_ext.
On the back-branches, a fix-CVE-2024-4317.sql script is provided
that will install into the "share" directory. This file can be
used to apply the fix to existing clusters.
Bumps catversion on 'master' branch only.
Reported-by: Lukas Fittl
Reviewed-by: Noah Misch, Tomas Vondra, Tom Lane
Security: CVE-2024-4317
Backpatch-through: 14
This commit reverts d3d55ce5713 and subsequent fixes 2b26a694554, 93c85db3b5b,
b44a1708abe, b7f315c9d7d, 8a8ed916f73, b5fb6736ed3, 0a93f803f45, e0477837ce4,
a7928a57b9f, 5ef34a8fc38, 30b4955a466, 8c441c08279, 028b15405b4, fe093994db4,
489072ab7a9, and 466979ef031.
We are quite late in the release cycle and new bugs continue to appear. Even
though we have fixes for all known bugs, there is a risk of throwing many
bugs to end users.
The plan for self-join elimination would be to do more review and testing,
then re-commit in the early v18 cycle.
Reported-by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2422119.1714691974%40sss.pgh.pa.us
94985c210 added code to detect when WindowFuncs were monotonic and
allowed additional quals to be "pushed down" into the subquery to be
used as WindowClause runConditions in order to short-circuit execution
in nodeWindowAgg.c.
The Node representation of runConditions wasn't well selected and
because we do qual pushdown before planning the subquery, the planning
of the subquery could perform subquery pull-up of nested subqueries.
For WindowFuncs with args, the arguments could be changed after pushing
the qual down to the subquery.
This was made more difficult by the fact that the code duplicated the
WindowFunc inside an OpExpr to include in the WindowClauses runCondition
field. This could result in duplication of subqueries and a pull-up of
such a subquery could result in another initplan parameter being issued
for the 2nd version of the subplan. This could result in errors such as:
ERROR: WindowFunc not found in subplan target lists
To fix this, we change the node representation of these run conditions
and instead of storing an OpExpr containing the WindowFunc in a list
inside WindowClause, we now store a new node type named
WindowFuncRunCondition within a new field in the WindowFunc. These get
transformed into OpExprs later in planning once subquery pull-up has been
performed.
This problem did exist in v15 and v16, but that was fixed by 9d36b883b
and e5d20bbd.
Cat version bump due to new node type and modifying WindowFunc struct.
Bug: #18305
Reported-by: Zuming Jiang
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18305-33c49b4c830b37b3%40postgresql.org
We support changing NO INHERIT constraint to INHERIT for constraints in
child relations when adding a constraint to some ancestor relation, and
also during pg_upgrade's schema restore; but other than those special
cases, command ALTER TABLE ADD CONSTRAINT should not be allowed to
change an existing constraint from NO INHERIT to INHERIT, as that would
require to process child relations so that they also acquire an
appropriate constraint, which we may not be in a position to do. (It'd
also be surprising behavior.)
It is conceivable that we want to allow ALTER TABLE SET NOT NULL to make
such a change; but in that case some more code is needed to implement it
correctly, so for now I've made that throw the same error message.
Also, during the prep phase of ALTER TABLE ADD CONSTRAINT, acquire locks
on all descendant tables; otherwise we might operate on child tables on
which no locks are held, particularly in the mode where a primary key
causes not-null constraints to be created on children.
Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin <exclusion@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7d923a66-55f0-3395-cd40-81c142b5448b@gmail.com
As an optimization, we store "name" columns as cstrings in btree
indexes.
Here we modify it so that Index Only Scans convert these cstrings back
to names with NAMEDATALEN bytes rather than storing the cstring in the
tuple slot, as was happening previously.
Bug: #17855
Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin
Reviewed-by: Alexander Lakhin, Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17855-5f523e0f9769a566@postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 12, all supported versions
If an ACL recorded in pg_init_privs mentions a non-pinned role,
that reference must also be noted in pg_shdepend so that we know
that the role can't go away without removing the ACL reference.
Otherwise, DROP ROLE could succeed and leave dangling entries
behind, which is what's causing the recent upgrade-check failures
on buildfarm member copperhead.
This has been wrong since pg_init_privs was introduced, but it's
escaped notice because typical pg_init_privs entries would only
mention the bootstrap superuser (pinned) or at worst the owner
of the extension (who can't go away before the extension does).
We lack even a representation of such a role reference for
pg_shdepend. My first thought for a solution was entries listing
pg_init_privs in classid, but that doesn't work because then there's
noplace to put the granted-on object's classid. Rather than adding
a new column to pg_shdepend, let's add a new deptype code
SHARED_DEPENDENCY_INITACL. Much of the associated boilerplate
code can be cribbed from code for SHARED_DEPENDENCY_ACL.
A lot of the bulk of this patch just stems from the new need to pass
the object's owner ID to recordExtensionInitPriv, so that we can
consult it while updating pg_shdepend. While many callers have that
at hand already, a few places now need to fetch the owner ID of an
arbitrary privilege-bearing object. For that, we assume that there
is a catcache on the relevant catalog's OID column, which is an
assumption already made in ExecGrant_common so it seems okay here.
We do need an entirely new routine RemoveRoleFromInitPriv to perform
cleanup of pg_init_privs ACLs during DROP OWNED BY. It's analogous
to RemoveRoleFromObjectACL, but we can't share logic because that
function operates by building a command parsetree and invoking
existing GRANT/REVOKE infrastructure. There is of course no SQL
command that would update pg_init_privs entries when we're not in
process of creating their extension, so we need a routine that can
do the updates directly.
catversion bump because this changes the expected contents of
pg_shdepend. For the same reason, there's no hope of back-patching
this, even though it fixes a longstanding bug. Fortunately, the
case where it's a problem seems to be near nonexistent in the field.
If it weren't for the buildfarm breakage, I'd have been content to
leave this for v18.
Patch by me; thanks to Daniel Gustafsson for review and discussion.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1745535.1712358659@sss.pgh.pa.us
- Bring memory context names in line with other naming
- Fix typos, reported off-list by Alexander Lakhin
- Remove copy-paste errors from comments
- Remove duplicate #undef
Also, fix a memory leak when updating from non-embeddable to
embeddable. Both were unreachable without adding C code.
Reported-by: Noah Misch
Author: Noah Misch
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada, John Naylor
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20240424210319.4c.nmisch%40google.com
Allow pg_sync_replication_slots() to error out during promotion of standby.
This makes the behavior of the SQL function consistent with the slot sync
worker. We also ensured that pg_sync_replication_slots() cannot be
executed if sync_replication_slots is enabled and the slotsync worker is
already running to perform the synchronization of slots. Previously, it
would have succeeded in cases when the worker is idle and failed when it
is performing sync which could confuse users.
This patch fixes another issue in the slot sync worker where
SignalHandlerForShutdownRequest() needs to be registered *before* setting
SlotSyncCtx->pid, otherwise, the slotsync worker could miss handling
SIGINT sent by the startup process(ShutDownSlotSync) if it is sent before
worker could register SignalHandlerForShutdownRequest(). To be consistent,
all signal handlers' registration is moved to a prior location before we
set the worker's pid.
Ensure that we clean up synced temp slots at the end of
pg_sync_replication_slots() to avoid such slots being left over after
promotion.
Ensure that ShutDownSlotSync() captures SlotSyncCtx->pid under spinlock to
avoid accessing invalid value as it can be reset by concurrent slot sync
exit due to an error.
Author: Shveta Malik
Reviewed-by: Hou Zhijie, Bertrand Drouvot, Amit Kapila, Masahiko Sawada
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJpy0uBefXUS_TSz=oxmYKHdg-fhxUT0qfjASW3nmqnzVC3p6A@mail.gmail.com
This field is not used directly in the code, but it is important for
query jumbling to be able to make a difference between a named
DEALLOCATE and DEALLOCATE ALL (see bb45156f342c). This behavior is
tracked in the regression tests of pg_stat_statements, but the reason
why this field is important can be easily missed, as a recent discussion
has proved, so let's improve its comment to document the reason why it
needs to be around.
Wording has been suggested by Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Zih1ATt37YFda8_p@paquier.xyz
JsonExprState.input_finfo is only assigned to, never read, and
it's really fairly useless since the value can be gotten out of
the adjacent input_fcinfo field. Let's remove it before someone
starts to depend on it.
While here, also remove TidScanState.tss_htup and AggState.combinedproj,
which are referenced nowhere. Those should have been removed by the
commits that caused them to become disused, but were not.
I don't think a catversion bump is necessary here, since plan trees
are never stored on disk.
Matthias van de Meent
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEze2WjsY4d0TBymLNGK4zpttUcg_YZaTjyWz2VfDUV6YH8wXQ@mail.gmail.com
The optimization for inserts into BRIN indexes added by c1ec02be1d79
relies on a cache that needs to be explicitly released after calling
index_insert(). The commit however failed to invoke the cleanup in
validate_index(), which calls index_insert() indirectly through
table_index_validate_scan().
After inspecting index_insert() callers, it seems unique_key_recheck()
is missing the call too.
Fixed by adding the two missing index_insert_cleanup() calls.
The commit does two additional improvements. The aminsertcleanup()
signature is modified to have the index as the first argument, to make
it more like the other AM callbacks. And the aminsertcleanup() callback
is invoked even if the ii_AmCache is NULL, so that it can decide if the
cleanup is necessary.
Author: Alvaro Herrera, Tomas Vondra
Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/202401091043.e3nrqiad6gb7@alvherre.pgsql
In tables with primary keys, pg_dump creates tables with primary keys by
initially dumping them with throw-away not-null constraints (marked "no
inherit" so that they don't create problems elsewhere), to later drop
them once the primary key is restored. Because of a unrelated
consideration, on tables with children we add not-null constraints to
all columns of the primary key when it is created.
If both a table and its child have primary keys, and pg_dump happens to
emit the child table first (and its throw-away not-null) and later its
parent table, the creation of the parent's PK will fail because the
throw-away not-null constraint collides with the permanent not-null
constraint that the PK wants to add, so the dump fails to restore.
We can work around this problem by letting the primary key "take over"
the child's not-null. This requires no changes to pg_dump, just two
changes to ALTER TABLE: first, the ability to convert a no-inherit
not-null constraint into a regular inheritable one (including recursing
down to children, if there are any); second, the ability to "drop" a
constraint that is defined both directly in the table and inherited from
a parent (which simply means to mark it as no longer having a local
definition).
Secondarily, change ATPrepAddPrimaryKey() to acquire locks all the way
down the inheritance hierarchy, in case we need to recurse when
propagating constraints.
These two changes allow pg_dump to reproduce more cases involving
inheritance from versions 16 and older.
Lastly, make two changes to pg_dump: 1) do not try to drop a not-null
constraint that's marked as inherited; this allows a dump to restore
with no errors if a table with a PK inherits from another which also has
a PK; 2) avoid giving inherited constraints throwaway names, for the
rare cases where such a constraint survives after the restore.
Reported-by: Andrew Bille <andrewbille@gmail.com>
Reported-by: Justin Pryzby <pryzby@telsasoft.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJnzarwkfRu76_yi3dqVF_WL-MpvT54zMwAxFwJceXdHB76bOA@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Zh0aAH7tbZb-9HbC@pryzbyj2023
This addresses some post-commit review comments for commits 6185c973,
de3600452, and 9425c596a0, with the following changes:
* Fix JSON_TABLE() syntax documentation to use the term
"path_expression" for JSON path expressions instead of
"json_path_specification" to be consistent with the other SQL/JSON
functions.
* Fix a typo in the example code in JSON_TABLE() documentation.
* Rewrite some newly added comments in jsonpath.h.
* In JsonPathQuery(), add missing cast to int before printing an enum
value.
Reported-by: Jian He <jian.universality@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CACJufxG_e0QLCgaELrr2ZNz7AxPeGCNKAORe3fHtFCQLsH4J4Q@mail.gmail.com
This improves some error messages emitted by SQL/JSON query functions
by mentioning column name when available, such as when they are
invoked as part of evaluating JSON_TABLE() columns. To do so, a new
field column_name is added to both JsonFuncExpr and JsonExpr that is
only populated when creating those nodes for transformed JSON_TABLE()
columns.
While at it, relevant error messages are reworded for clarity.
Reported-by: Jian He <jian.universality@gmail.com>
Suggested-by: Jian He <jian.universality@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CACJufxG_e0QLCgaELrr2ZNz7AxPeGCNKAORe3fHtFCQLsH4J4Q@mail.gmail.com
GlobalVisTestNonRemovableHorizon() was only used for the implementation of
snapshot_too_old, which was removed in f691f5b80a8. As using
GlobalVisTestNonRemovableHorizon() is not particularly efficient, no new uses
for it should be added. Therefore remove.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20240415185720.q4dg4dlcyvvrabz4@awork3.anarazel.de
All backend-side variables should be marked with PGDLLIMPORT, as per
policy introduced in 8ec569479f. aafc05de1bf5 has forgotten
MyClientSocket, and 05c3980e7f47 LoadedSSL.
These can be spotted with a command like this one (be careful of not
switching __pg_log_level):
src/tools/mark_pgdllimport.pl $(git ls-files src/include/)
Reported-by: Peter Eisentraut
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ZhzkRzrkKhbeQMRm@paquier.xyz
When matching constraints in AttachPartitionEnsureIndexes() we weren't
testing the constraint type, which could make a UNIQUE key lacking a
not-null constraint incorrectly satisfy a primary key requirement. Fix
this by testing that the constraint types match. (Other possible
mismatches are verified by comparing index properties.)
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/202402051447.wimb4xmtiiyb@alvherre.pgsql
Coverity complained about not freeing some memory associated with
incrementally parsing backup manifests. To fix that, provide and use a new
shutdown function for the JsonManifestParseIncrementalState object, in
line with a suggestion from Tom Lane.
While analysing the problem, I noticed a buglet in freeing memory for
incremental json lexers. To fix that remove a bogus condition on
freeing the memory allocated for them.
b262ad440 added code to have the planner remove redundant IS NOT NULL
quals and eliminate needless scans for IS NULL quals on tables where the
qual's column has a NOT NULL constraint.
That commit failed to consider that an inheritance parent table could
have differing NOT NULL constraints between the parent and the child.
This caused issues as if we eliminated a qual on the parent, when
applying the quals to child tables in apply_child_basequals(), the qual
might not have been added to the parent's baserestrictinfo.
Here we fix this by not applying the optimization to remove redundant
quals to RelOptInfos belonging to inheritance parents and applying the
optimization again in apply_child_basequals(). Effectively, this means
that the parent and child are considered independently as the parent has
both an inh=true and inh=false RTE and we still apply the optimization
to the RelOptInfo corresponding to the inh=false RTE.
We're able to still apply the optimization in add_base_clause_to_rel()
for partitioned tables as the NULLability of partitions must match that
of their parent. And, if we ever expand restriction_is_always_false()
and restriction_is_always_true() to handle partition constraints then we
can apply the same logic as, even in multi-level partitioned tables,
there's no way to route values to a partition when the qual does not
match the partition qual of the partitioned table's parent partition.
The same is true for CHECK constraints as those must also match between
arent partitioned tables and their partitions.
Author: Richard Guo, David Rowley
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMbWs4930gQSZmjR7aANzEapdy61gCg6z8dT-kAEYD0sYWKPdQ@mail.gmail.com
This reverts commit b840508644 and bcb14f4abc. These commits were made
for commit 5bec1d6bc5 (Improve eviction algorithm in ReorderBuffer
using max-heap for many subtransactions). However, per discussion,
commit efb8acc0d0 replaced binary heap + index with pairing heap, and
made these commits unnecessary.
Reported-by: Jeff Davis
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/12747c15811d94efcc5cda72d6b35c80d7bf3443.camel%40j-davis.com
A pairing heap can perform the same operations as the binary heap +
index, with as good or better algorithmic complexity, and that's an
existing data structure so that we don't need to invent anything new
compared to v16. This commit makes the new binaryheap functionality
that was added in commits b840508644 and bcb14f4abc unnecessary, but
they will be reverted separately.
Remove the optimization to only build and maintain the heap when the
amount of memory used is close to the limit, becuase the bookkeeping
overhead with the pairing heap seems to be small enough that it
doesn't matter in practice.
Reported-by: Jeff Davis
Author: Heikki Linnakangas
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Hayato Kuroda, Masahiko Sawada
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/12747c15811d94efcc5cda72d6b35c80d7bf3443.camel%40j-davis.com