Commit Graph

38621 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
dae9f16aa3 Fix possible Assert failure in cost_memoize_rescan
In cost_memoize_rescan(), when calculating the hit_ratio using the calls
and ndistinct estimations, if the value that was set in
MemoizePath.calls had not been processed through clamp_row_est(), then it
was possible that it was set to some non-integer value which could result
in ndistinct being 1 higher than calls due to estimate_num_groups()
performing clamp_row_est() on its input_rows.  This could result in
hit_ratio values slightly below 0.0, which would cause an Assert failure.

The value of MemoizePath.calls comes from the final parameter in the
create_memoize_path() function, of which we only have one true caller of.
That caller passes outer_path->rows.  All the core code I looked at
always seems to call clamp_row_est() on the Path.rows, so there might
have been no issues with any core Paths causing troubles here.  The bug
report was about a CustomPath with a non-clamped row estimated.

The misbehavior as a result of this seems to be mostly limited to the
Assert() failing.  Aside from that, it seems the Memoize costs would
just come out slightly higher than they should have, which is likely
fairly harmless.

Reported-by: Kohei KaiGai <kaigai@heterodb.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAOP8fzZnTU+N64UYJYogb1hN-5hFP+PwTb3m_cnGAD7EsQwrKw@mail.gmail.com
Reviewed-by: Richard Guo
Backpatch-through: 14, where Memoize was introduced
2024-06-19 10:21:52 +12:00
e4a55378f7 Fix insertion of SP-GiST REDIRECT tuples during REINDEX CONCURRENTLY.
Reconstruction of an SP-GiST index by REINDEX CONCURRENTLY may
insert some REDIRECT tuples.  This will typically happen in
a transaction that lacks an XID, which leads either to assertion
failure in spgFormDeadTuple or to insertion of a REDIRECT tuple
with zero xid.  The latter's not good either, since eventually
VACUUM will apply GlobalVisTestIsRemovableXid() to the zero xid,
resulting in either an assertion failure or a garbage answer.

In practice, since REINDEX CONCURRENTLY locks out index scans
till it's done, it doesn't matter whether it inserts REDIRECTs
or PLACEHOLDERs; and likewise it doesn't matter how soon VACUUM
reduces such a REDIRECT to a PLACEHOLDER.  So in non-assert builds
there's no observable problem here, other than perhaps a little
index bloat.  But it's not behaving as intended.

To fix, remove the failing Assert in spgFormDeadTuple, acknowledging
that we might sometimes insert a zero XID; and guard VACUUM's
GlobalVisTestIsRemovableXid() call with a test for valid XID,
ensuring that we'll reduce such a REDIRECT the first time VACUUM
sees it.  (Versions before v14 use TransactionIdPrecedes here,
which won't fail on zero xid, so they really have no bug at all
in non-assert builds.)

Another solution could be to not create REDIRECTs at all during
REINDEX CONCURRENTLY, making the relevant code paths treat that
case like index build (which likewise knows that no concurrent
index scans can be happening).  That would allow restoring the
Assert in spgFormDeadTuple, but we'd still need the VACUUM change
because redirection tuples with zero xid may be out there already.
But there doesn't seem to be a nice way for spginsert() to tell that
it's being called in REINDEX CONCURRENTLY without some API changes,
so we'll leave that as a possible future improvement.

In HEAD, also rename the SpGistState.myXid field to redirectXid,
which seems less misleading (since it might not in fact be our
transaction's XID) and is certainly less uninformatively generic.

Per bug #18499 from Alexander Lakhin.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18499-8a519c280f956480@postgresql.org
2024-06-17 14:30:59 -04:00
f3f6a14ce3 Clean out column-level pg_init_privs entries when dropping tables.
DeleteInitPrivs did not get the memo about how, when dropping a
whole object (with subid == 0), you should drop entries relating
to its sub-objects too.  This is visible in the test_pg_dump test
case if one drops the extension at the end: the entry for
	GRANT SELECT(col1) ON regress_pg_dump_table TO public;
was still present in pg_init_privs afterwards, although it was
pointing to a dangling table OID.

Noted while fooling with a fix for REASSIGN OWNED for pg_init_privs
entries.  This bug is aboriginal in the pg_init_privs feature
though, and there seems no reason not to back-patch the fix.
2024-06-14 16:20:35 -04:00
5912bf77c5 Fix parsing of ignored operators in websearch_to_tsquery().
The manual says clearly that punctuation in the input of
websearch_to_tsquery() is ignored, except for the special cases
of dashes and quotes.  However, this failed for cases like
"(foo bar) or something", or in general an ISOPERATOR character
in front of the "or".  We'd switch back to WAITOPERAND state,
then ignore the operator character while remaining in that state,
and then reach the "or" in WAITOPERAND state which (intentionally)
makes us treat it as data.

The fix is simple enough: if we see an ISOPERATOR character while in
WAITOPERATOR state, we have to skip it while staying in that state.
(We don't need to worry about other punctuation characters: those will
be consumed as though they were words, but then rejected by lexizing.)

In v14 and up (since commit eb086056f) we can simplify the code a bit
more too, because there is no longer a reason for the WAITOPERAND
state to distinguish between quoted and unquoted operands.

Per bug #18479 from Manos Emmanouilidis.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18479-d9b46e2fc242c33e@postgresql.org
2024-06-13 20:34:43 -04:00
1450db793f When replanning a plpgsql "simple expression", check it's still simple.
The previous coding here assumed that we didn't need to recheck any
of the querytree tests made in exec_simple_check_plan().  I think
we supposed that those properties were fully determined by the
syntax of the source text and hence couldn't change.  That is true
for most of them, but at least hasTargetSRFs and hasAggs can change
by dint of forcibly dropping an originally-referenced function and
recreating it with new properties.  That leads to "unexpected plan
node type" or similar failures.

These tests are pretty cheap compared to the cost of replanning, so
rather than sweat over exactly which properties need to be rechecked,
let's just recheck them all.  Hence, factor out those tests into a new
function exec_is_simple_query(), and rearrange callers as needed.

A second problem in the same area was that if we failed during
replanning or during exec_save_simple_expr(), we'd potentially
leave behind now-dangling pointers to the old simple expression,
potentially resulting in crashes later.  To fix, clear those pointers
before replanning.

The v12 code looks quite different in this area but still has the
bug about needing to recheck query simplicity.  I chose to back-patch
all of the plpgsql_simple.sql test script, which formerly didn't exist
in this branch.

Per bug #18497 from Nikita Kalinin.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18497-fe93b6da82ce31d4@postgresql.org
2024-06-13 13:37:50 -04:00
d881f6fdf5 Clamp result of MultiXactMemberFreezeThreshold
The purpose of the function is to reduce the effective
autovacuum_multixact_freeze_max_age if the multixact members SLRU is
approaching wraparound, to make multixid freezing more aggressive.
The returned value should therefore never be greater than plain
autovacuum_multixact_freeze_max_age.

Reviewed-by: Robert Haas
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/85fb354c-f89f-4d47-b3a2-3cbd461c90a3@iki.fi
Backpatch-through: 12, all supported versions
2024-06-13 19:02:54 +03:00
0e51485392 Skip some permissions checks on Cygwin
These are checks that are already skipped on other Windows systems.

Backpatch to all live branches, as appropriate.
2024-06-13 07:42:14 -04:00
096f2132c6 Fix infer_arbiter_indexes() to not assume resultRelation is 1.
infer_arbiter_indexes failed to renumber varnos in index expressions
or predicates that it got from the catalogs.  This escaped detection
up to now because the stored varnos in such trees will be 1, and an
INSERT's result relation is usually the first rangetable entry,
so that that was fine.  However, in cases such as inserting through
an updatable view, it's not fine, leading to failure to match the
expressions to the query with ensuing "there is no unique or exclusion
constraint matching the ON CONFLICT specification" errors.

Fix by copy-and-paste from get_relation_info().

Per bug #18502 from Michael Wang.  Back-patch to all supported
versions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18502-545b53f5b81e54e0@postgresql.org
2024-06-11 17:57:46 -04:00
5dcaefc6a0 Fix creation of partition descriptor during concurrent detach
When a partition is being detached in concurrent mode, it is possible
for find_inheritance_children_extended() to return that partition in the
list, and immediately after that receive an invalidation message that
sets its relpartbound to NULL just before we read it.  (This can happen
because table_open() reads invalidation messages.)  Currently we raise
an error
  ERROR:  missing relpartbound for relation %u
about the situation, but that's bogus because the table is no longer a
partition, so we shouldn't be complaining about it.  A better reaction
is to retry the find_inheritance_children_extended call to get a new
list, which will no longer have the partition being detached.

Noticed while investigating bug #18377.

Backpatch to 14, where DETACH CONCURRENTLY appeared.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/202405201616.y4ht2qe5ihoy@alvherre.pgsql
2024-06-11 11:38:45 +02:00
5f200ab574 Tighten test_predtest's input checks, and improve error messages.
test_predtest() neglected to consider the possibility that
SPI_plan_get_cached_plan would return NULL.  This led to a core
dump if the input (incorrectly) contains more than one SQL
command.

While here, let's expend more than zero effort on the error
message for this case and nearby ones.

Per (half of) bug #18483 from Alexander Kozhemyakin.
Back-patch to all supported branches, not because this is
very significant (it's merely test scaffolding) but to make
our world a bit safer for fuzz testing.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18483-30bfff42de238000@postgresql.org
2024-06-07 16:45:56 -04:00
2dad0f433d Reject modifying a temp table of another session with ALTER TABLE.
Normally this case isn't even reachable by non-superusers, since
permissions checks prevent naming such a table.  However, it is
possible to make it happen by altering a parent table whose child
is another session's temp table.

We definitely can't support any such ALTER that requires modifying
the contents of such a table, since we lack access to the other
session's temporary-buffer pool.  But there seems no good reason
to allow it even if it'd only require changing catalog contents.
One reason not to allow it is that we'd rather not expose the
implementation-dependent behavior of whether a specific ALTER
requires touching the table contents.  Another is that there may
be (in future, even if not today) optimizations that assume that
a session's own temp tables won't be modified by other sessions.

Hence, add a RELATION_IS_OTHER_TEMP() check to all the places
where ALTER TABLE currently does CheckTableNotInUse().  (I looked
through all other callers of CheckTableNotInUse(), and they seem
OK already.)

Per bug #18492 from Alexander Lakhin.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18492-c7a2634bf4968763@postgresql.org
2024-06-07 14:50:09 -04:00
0f7d1338c8 Fix behavior of stable functions called from a CALL's argument list.
If the CALL is within an atomic context (e.g. there's an outer
transaction block), _SPI_execute_plan should acquire a fresh snapshot
to execute any such functions with.  We failed to do that and instead
passed them the Portal snapshot, which had been acquired at the start
of the current SQL command.  This'd lead to seeing stale values of
rows modified since the start of the command.

This is arguably a bug in 84f5c2908: I failed to see that "are we in
non-atomic mode" needs to be defined the same way as it is further
down in _SPI_execute_plan, i.e. check !_SPI_current->atomic not just
options->allow_nonatomic.  Alternatively the blame could be laid on
plpgsql, which is unconditionally passing allow_nonatomic = true
for CALL/DO even when it knows it's in an atomic context.  However,
fixing it in spi.c seems like a better idea since that will also fix
the problem for any extensions that may have copied plpgsql's coding
pattern.

While here, update an obsolete comment about _SPI_execute_plan's
snapshot management.

Per report from Victor Yegorov.  Back-patch to all supported versions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAGnEboiRe+fG2QxuBO2390F7P8e2MQ6UyBjZSL_w1Cej+E4=Vw@mail.gmail.com
2024-06-07 13:27:26 -04:00
d88dcdf0fa Fix failure with SQL-procedure polymorphic output arguments in v12.
Before the v13-era commit 913bbd88d, check_sql_fn_retval fails to
resolve polymorphic output types and then just throws up its hands and
assumes the check will be made at runtime.  I think that's true for
ordinary functions returning RECORD, but it doesn't happen in CALL,
potentially resulting in crashes if the actual output of the SQL
procedure's SELECT doesn't match the type inferred from polymorphism.
With a little bit of rearrangement, we can use get_call_result_type
instead of get_func_result_type and thereby infer the correct types.

I'm still unwilling to back-patch all of 913bbd88d, so if the types
don't match you'll get an error rather than perhaps silently inserting
a cast as v13 and later can.  That's consistent with prior behavior
though, so it seems fine.

Prior to 70ffb27b2, you'd typically get other errors due to other
shortcomings of CALL's management of polymorphism.  Nonetheless,
this is an independent bug.

Although there is no bug in v13 and up, it seems prudent to add
the test case for this to the newer branches too.  It's clearly
an under-tested area.

Per report from Andrew Bille.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJnzarw9EeWHAQRm76dXd=7j+rgw6ERqC=nCay8jeFqTwKwhqQ@mail.gmail.com
2024-06-06 15:16:56 -04:00
1488dee08c Fix pl/tcl's handling of errors from Tcl_ListObjGetElements().
In a procedure or function returning tuple, we use that function to
parse the Tcl script's result, which is supposed to be a Tcl list.
If it isn't, you get an error.  Commit 26abb50c4 incautiously
supposed that we could use throw_tcl_error() to report such an error.
That doesn't actually work, because low-level functions like
Tcl_ListObjGetElements() don't fill Tcl's errorInfo variable.
The result is either a null-pointer-dereference crash or emission
of misleading context information describing the previous Tcl error.

Back off to just reporting the interpreter's result string, and
improve throw_tcl_error()'s comment to explain when to use it.

Also, although the similar code in pltcl_trigger_handler() avoided
this mistake, it was using a fairly confusing wording of the
error message.  Improve that while we're here.

Per report from A. Kozhemyakin.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.

Erik Wienhold and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/6a2a1c40-2b2c-4a33-8b72-243c0766fcda@postgrespro.ru
2024-06-04 18:02:13 -04:00
0795a35d13 Remove race conditions between ECPGdebug() and ecpg_log().
Coverity complains that ECPGdebug is accessing debugstream without
holding debug_mutex, which is a fair complaint: we should take
debug_mutex while changing the settings ecpg_log looks at.

In some branches it also complains about unlocked use of simple_debug.
I think it's intentional and safe to have a quick unlocked check of
simple_debug at the start of ecpg_log, since that early exit will
always be taken in non-debug cases.  But we should recheck
simple_debug after acquiring the mutex.  In the worst case, calling
ECPGdebug concurrently with ecpg_log in another thread could result
in a null-pointer dereference due to debugstream transiently being
NULL while simple_debug isn't 0.

This is largely hypothetical, since it's unlikely anybody uses
ECPGdebug() at all in the field, and our own regression tests
don't seem to be hitting the theoretical race conditions either.
Still, if we're going to the trouble of having mutexes here, we ought
to be using them in a way that's actually safe not just almost safe.
Hence, back-patch to all supported branches.
2024-05-23 15:52:06 -04:00
1015162c35 Fix handling of extended expression statistics in CREATE TABLE LIKE.
transformTableLikeClause believed that it could process extended
statistics immediately because "the representation of CreateStatsStmt
doesn't depend on column numbers".  That was true when extended stats
were first introduced, but it was falsified by the addition of
extended stats on expressions: the parsed expression tree is fed
forward by the LIKE option, and that will contain Vars.  So if the
new table doesn't have attnums identical to the old one's (typically
because there are some dropped columns in the old one), that doesn't
work.  The CREATE goes through, but it emits invalid statistics
objects that will cause problems later.

Fortunately, we already have logic that can adapt expression trees
to the possibly-new column numbering.  To use it, we have to delay
processing of CREATE_TABLE_LIKE_STATISTICS into expandTableLikeClause,
just as for other LIKE options that involve expressions.

Per bug #18468 from Alexander Lakhin.  Back-patch to v14 where
extended statistics on expressions were added.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18468-f5add190e3fa5902@postgresql.org
2024-05-22 17:54:17 -04:00
5ac340602e Account for optimized MinMax aggregates during SS_finalize_plan.
We are capable of optimizing MIN() and MAX() aggregates on indexed
columns into subqueries that exploit the index, rather than the normal
thing of scanning the whole table.  When we do this, we replace the
Aggref node(s) with Params referencing subquery outputs.  Such Params
really ought to be included in the per-plan-node extParam/allParam
sets computed by SS_finalize_plan.  However, we've never done so
up to now because of an ancient implementation choice to perform
that substitution during set_plan_references, which runs after
SS_finalize_plan, so that SS_finalize_plan never sees these Params.

The cleanest fix would be to perform a separate tree walk to do
these substitutions before SS_finalize_plan runs.  That seems
unattractive, first because a whole-tree mutation pass is expensive,
and second because we lack infrastructure for visiting expression
subtrees in a Plan tree, so that we'd need a new function knowing
as much as SS_finalize_plan knows about that.  I also considered
swapping the order of SS_finalize_plan and set_plan_references,
but that fell foul of various assumptions that seem tricky to fix.
So the approach adopted here is to teach SS_finalize_plan itself
to check for such Aggrefs.  I refactored things a bit in setrefs.c
to avoid having three copies of the code that does that.

Back-patch of v17 commits d0d44049d and 779ac2c74.  When d0d44049d
went in, there was no evidence that it was fixing a reachable bug,
so I refrained from back-patching.  Now we have such evidence.

Per bug #18465 from Hal Takahara.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18465-2fae927718976b22@postgresql.org
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2391880.1689025003@sss.pgh.pa.us
2024-05-18 14:31:35 -04:00
ccf3408cff Refuse upgrades from pre-9.0 clusters
Commit 695b4a113ab added a dependency on retrieving oldestxid from
pg_control, which only exists in 9.0 and onwards, but the check for
8.4 as the oldest version was retained. Since there has been few if
any complaints of 8.4 upgrades not working, fix by setting 9.0 as
the oldest version supported rather than resurrecting 8.4 support.

Backpatch to all supported versions.

Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1973418.1657040382@sss.pgh.pa.us
Backpatch-through: v12
2024-05-17 14:24:27 +02:00
01e98e0cdd Fix documentation about DROP DATABASE FORCE process termination rights.
Specifically, it terminates a background worker even if the caller
couldn't terminate the background worker with pg_terminate_backend().
Commit 3a9b18b3095366cd0c4305441d426d04572d88c1 neglected to update
this.  Back-patch to v13, which introduced DROP DATABASE FORCE.

Reviewed by Amit Kapila.  Reported by Kirill Reshke.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20240429212756.60.nmisch@google.com
2024-05-16 14:11:13 -07:00
525bd1620e Fix handling of polymorphic output arguments for procedures.
Most of the infrastructure for procedure arguments was already
okay with polymorphic output arguments, but it turns out that
CallStmtResultDesc() was a few bricks shy of a load here.  It thought
all it needed to do was call build_function_result_tupdesc_t, but
that function specifically disclaims responsibility for resolving
polymorphic arguments.  Failing to handle that doesn't seem to be
a problem for CALL in plpgsql, but CALL from plain SQL would get
errors like "cannot display a value of type anyelement", or even
crash outright.

In v14 and later we can simply examine the exposed types of the
CallStmt.outargs nodes to get the right type OIDs.  But it's a lot
more complicated to fix in v12/v13, because those versions don't
have CallStmt.outargs, nor do they do expand_function_arguments
until ExecuteCallStmt runs.  We have to duplicatively run
expand_function_arguments, and then re-determine which elements
of the args list are output arguments.

Per bug #18463 from Drew Kimball.  Back-patch to all supported
versions, since it's busted in all of them.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18463-f8cd77e12564d8a2@postgresql.org
2024-05-14 20:19:20 -04:00
c8714230ad Fix pg_sequence_last_value() for unlogged sequences on standbys.
Presently, when this function is called for an unlogged sequence on
a standby server, it will error out with a message like

	ERROR:  could not open file "base/5/16388": No such file or directory

Since the pg_sequences system view uses pg_sequence_last_value(),
it can error similarly.  To fix, modify the function to return NULL
for unlogged sequences on standby servers.  Since this bug is
present on all versions since v15, this approach is preferable to
making the ERROR nicer because we need to repair the pg_sequences
view without modifying its definition on released versions.  For
consistency, this commit also modifies the function to return NULL
for other sessions' temporary sequences.  The pg_sequences view
already appropriately filters out such sequences, so there's no bug
there, but we might as well offer some defense in case someone
invokes this function directly.

Unlogged sequences were first introduced in v15, but temporary
sequences are much older, so while the fix for unlogged sequences
is only back-patched to v15, the temporary sequence portion is
back-patched to all supported versions.

We could also remove the privilege check in the pg_sequences view
definition in v18 if we modify this function to return NULL for
sequences for which the current user lacks privileges, but that is
left as a future exercise for when v18 development begins.

Reviewed-by: Tom Lane, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20240501005730.GA594666%40nathanxps13
Backpatch-through: 12
2024-05-13 15:54:14 -05:00
d39337021e Fix recursive RECORD-returning plpython functions.
If we recursed to a new call of the same function, with a different
coldeflist (AS clause), it would fail because the inner call would
overwrite the outer call's idea of what to return.  This is vaguely
like 1d2fe56e4 and c5bec5426, but it's not due to any API decisions:
it's just that we computed the actual output rowtype at the start of
the call, and saved it in the per-procedure data structure.  We can
fix it at basically zero cost by doing the computation at the end
of each call instead of the start.

It's not clear that there's any real-world use-case for such a
function, but given that it doesn't cost anything to fix,
it'd be silly not to.

Per report from Andreas Karlsson.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1651a46d-3c15-4028-a8c1-d74937b54e19@proxel.se
2024-05-09 13:16:21 -04:00
41adf9d960 Fix overread in JSON parsing errors for incomplete byte sequences
json_lex_string() relies on pg_encoding_mblen_bounded() to point to the
end of a JSON string when generating an error message, and the input it
uses is not guaranteed to be null-terminated.

It was possible to walk off the end of the input buffer by a few bytes
when the last bytes consist of an incomplete multi-byte sequence, as
token_terminator would point to a location defined by
pg_encoding_mblen_bounded() rather than the end of the input.  This
commit switches token_terminator so as the error uses data up to the
end of the JSON input.

More work should be done so as this code could rely on an equivalent of
report_invalid_encoding() so as incorrect byte sequences can show in
error messages in a readable form.  This requires work for at least two
cases in the JSON parsing API: an incomplete token and an invalid escape
sequence.  A more complete solution may be too invasive for a backpatch,
so this is left as a future improvement, taking care of the overread
first.

A test is added on HEAD as test_json_parser makes this issue
straight-forward to check.

Note that pg_encoding_mblen_bounded() no longer has any callers.  This
will be removed on HEAD with a separate commit, as this is proving to
encourage unsafe coding.

Author: Jacob Champion
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAOYmi+ncM7pwLS3AnKCSmoqqtpjvA8wmCdoBtKA3ZrB2hZG6zA@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 13
2024-05-09 12:45:48 +09:00
52b23b4e1c Ensure that "pg_restore -l" reports dependent TOC entries correctly.
If -l was specified together with selective-restore options such as -n
or -N, dependent TOC entries such as comments would be omitted from
the listing, even when an actual restore would have selected them.
This happened because PrintTOCSummary neglected to update the te->reqs
marking of the entry they depended on.

Per report from Justin Pryzby.  This has been wrong since 0d4e6ed30
taught _tocEntryRequired to sometimes look at the "reqs" marking of
other TOC entries, so back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ZjoeirG7yxODdC4P@pryzbyj2023
2024-05-07 18:23:11 -04:00
90d39929a8 Don't corrupt plpython's "TD" dictionary in a recursive trigger call.
If a plpython-language trigger caused another one to be invoked,
the "TD" dictionary created for the inner one would overwrite the
outer one's "TD" dictionary.  This is more or less the same problem
that 1d2fe56e4 fixed for ordinary functions in plpython, so fix it
the same way, by saving and restoring "TD" during a recursive
invocation.

This fix makes an ABI-incompatible change in struct PLySavedArgs.
I'm not too worried about that because it seems highly unlikely that
any extension is messing with those structs.  We could imagine doing
something weird to preserve nominal ABI compatibility in the back
branches, like keeping the saved TD object in an extra element of
namedargs[].  However, that would only be very nominal compatibility:
if anything *is* touching PLySavedArgs, it would likely do the wrong
thing due to not knowing about the additional value.  So I judge it
not worth the ugliness to do something different there.

(I also changed struct PLyProcedure, but its added field fits
into formerly-padding space, so that should be safe.)

Per bug #18456 from Jacques Combrink.  This bug is very ancient,
so back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3008982.1714853799@sss.pgh.pa.us
2024-05-07 18:15:00 -04:00
c3425383ba Fix privilege checks in pg_stats_ext and pg_stats_ext_exprs.
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
2024-05-06 09:00:19 -05:00
0288acb0c6 Translation updates
Source-Git-URL: https://git.postgresql.org/git/pgtranslation/messages.git
Source-Git-Hash: c5f76beb79ef3e1424902905d99033b6c1e659b5
2024-05-06 12:12:28 +02:00
e6b0efc65e Ensure we allocate NAMEDATALEN bytes for names in Index Only Scans
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
2024-05-01 13:22:41 +12:00
51189f98a9 Disallow converting a table to a view within an outer SQL command.
We have long disallowed all forms of ALTER TABLE if the table is
already opened by some outer SQL command in the same session.
This has the same purpose as obtaining AccessExclusiveLock, but
since a session's own locks don't conflict the lock only blocks use
of the table by other sessions, not our own.  Without this check,
the ALTER might confuse the outer SQL command since any previous
inspection of the table would potentially become invalid.

However, the RelisBecomingView code path in DefineQueryRewrite never
got that memo, and assumed that AccessExclusiveLock is sufficient
for performing something morally equivalent to a rather invasive
ALTER TABLE.  Unsurprisingly, this can confuse an outer command
that is trying to do something with the table.

This was submitted as a security issue, but the security team
has been unable to identify any consequence worse than a null
pointer dereference (from trying to access rd_tableam methods
that the relation no longer has).  Therefore, in accordance
with our usual policy, it's not security material and should
just be fixed as a routine bug.

Fix by disallowing the operation if the table is open locally,
exactly as ALTER TABLE does it.

Per an anonymous security researcher, via Bundesamt für Sicherheit
in der Informationstechnik.

Patch v12-v15 only.  In v16 and later, we removed this code
altogether (cf. commit b23cd185f), so that there's no issue.
2024-04-30 15:22:55 -04:00
2ca19aa816 Close race condition between datfrozen and relfrozen updates.
vac_update_datfrozenxid() did multiple loads of relfrozenxid and
relminmxid from buffer memory, and it assumed each would get the same
value.  Not so if a concurrent vac_update_relstats() did an inplace
update.  Commit 2d2e40e3befd8b9e0d2757554537345b15fa6ea2 fixed the same
kind of bug in vac_truncate_clog().  Today's bug could cause the
rel-level field and XIDs in the rel's rows to precede the db-level
field.  A cluster having such values should VACUUM affected tables.
Back-patch to v12 (all supported versions).

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20240423003956.e7.nmisch@google.com
2024-04-29 10:25:00 -07:00
617a239272 Throw a more on-point error for functions depending on columns.
ALTER COLUMN TYPE wasn't expecting to find any pg_proc objects
depending on the column whose type is to be altered.  That indeed
wasn't possible when this code was written, but it is possible
since we introduced new-style SQL function bodies.

It's about as difficult to fix this case as it is to fix dependent
views, and we've been punting on those for years, so I don't feel
too awful about punting for functions too.  (I sure wouldn't risk
back-patching such code.)  So just throw a more user-facing error.
Also, adjust some of the existing comments to reflect that these
are all pretty much the same issue.

(This patch also fixes it so we will tolerate finding such a
dependency during ALTER COLUMN SET EXPRESSION; in that, we need
not do anything to the function, so no error is wanted.  That
problem is new in HEAD.)

Per bug #18449 from Alexander Lakhin.  Back-patch to v14 where
we added new-style SQL functions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18449-f8248467aaa294d5@postgresql.org
2024-04-28 14:34:21 -04:00
1748379b63 Detect more overflows in timestamp[tz]_pl_interval.
In commit 25cd2d640 I (tgl) opined that "The additions of the months
and microseconds fields could also overflow, of course.  However,
I believe we need no additional checks there; the existing range
checks should catch such cases".  This is demonstrably wrong however
for the microseconds field, and given that discovery it seems prudent
to be paranoid about the months addition as well.

Report and patch by Joseph Koshakow.  As before, back-patch to all
supported branches.  (However, the test case doesn't work before
v15 because we didn't allow wider-than-int32 numbers in interval
literals.  A variant test could probably be built that fits within
that restriction, but it didn't seem worth the trouble.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAvxfHf77sRHKoEzUw9_cMYSpbpNS2C+J_+8Dq4+0oi8iKopeA@mail.gmail.com
2024-04-28 13:42:13 -04:00
de84608e26 Fix MSVC recipe for ecpg regression tests, redux.
Forgot to inject -DCMDLINESYM=123 ...

Per buildfarm.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4cc4dc47-ca2b-4129-8784-db69b5f82777@dunslane.net
2024-04-19 01:07:41 -04:00
df66319f77 Fix MSVC recipe for ecpg regression tests.
While back-patching commit 6f0cef935, I forgot that the MSVC
build scripts would also need adjustment in the back branches.
This is a blind attempt at a fix, but it's basically copying
nearby code so I think it will work.

Per buildfarm (via Andrew Dunstan)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4cc4dc47-ca2b-4129-8784-db69b5f82777@dunslane.net
2024-04-18 20:47:37 -04:00
4631646391 Fix assorted bugs in ecpg's macro mechanism.
The code associated with EXEC SQL DEFINE was unreadable and full of
bugs, notably:

* It'd attempt to free a non-malloced string if the ecpg program
tries to redefine a macro that was defined on the command line.

* Possible memory stomp if user writes "-D=foo".

* Undef'ing or redefining a macro defined on the command line would
change the state visible to the next file, when multiple files are
specified on the command line.  (While possibly that could have been
an intentional choice, the code clearly intends to revert to the
original macro state; it's just failing to consider this interaction.)

* Missing "break" in defining a new macro meant that redefinition
of an existing name would cause an extra entry to be added to the
definition list.  While not immediately harmful, a subsequent undef
would result in the prior entry becoming visible again.

* The interactions with input buffering are subtle and were entirely
undocumented.

It's not that surprising that we hadn't noticed these bugs,
because there was no test coverage at all of either the -D
command line switch or multiple input files.  This patch adds
such coverage (in a rather hacky way I guess).

In addition to the code bugs, the user documentation was confused
about whether the -D switch defines a C macro or an ecpg one, and
it failed to mention that you can write "-Dsymbol=value".

These problems are old, so back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/998011.1713217712@sss.pgh.pa.us
2024-04-16 12:31:32 -04:00
ab2402268c Fix generation of EC join conditions at the wrong plan level.
get_baserel_parampathinfo previously assumed without checking that
the results of generate_join_implied_equalities "necessarily satisfy
join_clause_is_movable_into".  This turns out to be wrong in the
presence of outer joins, because the generated clauses could include
Vars that mustn't be evaluated below a relevant outer join.  That
led to applying clauses at the wrong plan level and possibly getting
incorrect query results.  We must check each clause's nullable_relids,
and really the right thing to do is test join_clause_is_movable_into.

However, trying to fix it that way exposes an oversight in
equivclass.c: it wasn't careful about marking join clauses for
appendrel children with the correct clause_relids.  That caused the
modified get_baserel_parampathinfo code to reject some clauses it
still needs to accept.  (See parallel commit for HEAD/v16 for more
commentary about that.)

Per bug #18429 from Benoît Ryder.  This misbehavior existed for
a long time before commit 2489d76c4, so patch v12-v15 this way.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18429-8982d4a348cc86c6@postgresql.org
2024-04-16 11:22:39 -04:00
78e81e14db Fix type-checking of RECORD-returning functions in FROM, redux.
Commit 2ed8f9a01 intended to institute a policy that if a
RangeTblFunction has a coldeflist, then the function return type is
certainly RECORD, and we should use the coldeflist as the source of
truth about what the columns of the record type are.  When the
original function has been folded to a constant, inspection of the
constant might give a different answer.  This situation will lead to
a tuple-type-mismatch error at execution, but up until that point we
need to consistently believe the coldeflist, or we'll have problems
from different bits of code reaching different conclusions.

expandRTE didn't get that memo though, and would try to produce a
tupdesc based on the constant in this situation, leading to an
assertion failure.  (Desultory testing suggests that non-assert
builds often manage to give the expected error, although I also
saw a "cache lookup failed for type 0" error, and it seems at
least possible that a crash could happen.)

Some other callers of get_expr_result_type and get_expr_result_tupdesc
were also being incautious about this.  While none of them seem to
have actual bugs, they're working harder than necessary in this case,
besides which it seems safest to have an explicit policy of not using
those functions on an RTE with a coldeflist.  Adjust the code
accordingly, and add commentary to funcapi.c about this policy.

Also fix an obsolete comment that claimed "get_expr_result_type()
doesn't know how to extract type info from a RECORD constant".
That hasn't been true since commit d57534740.

Per bug #18422 from Alexander Lakhin.
As with the previous commit, back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18422-89ca86c8eac5246d@postgresql.org
2024-04-15 12:56:56 -04:00
ad23af83da Update nbits_set in brin_bloom_union
Properly update the number of bits set in the bitmap after merging the
filters in brin_bloom_union.

This is mostly harmless, as the counter is used only in the output
function, which means pageinspect may show incorrect information about
the BRIN summary. The counter does not affect correctness.

Discovered while adding a regression test comparing indexes built with
and without parallelism. The parallel index builds exercise the union
procedure when merging results from workers, which is otherwise very
hard to do in a test. Which is why this went unnoticed until now.

Backpatch through 14, where the BRIN bloom opclasses were introduced.

Backpatch-through: 14
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1df00a66-db5a-4e66-809a-99b386a06d86%40enterprisedb.com
2024-04-14 18:18:07 +02:00
08059fc049 freespace: Don't return blocks past the end of the main fork.
GetPageWithFreeSpace() callers assume the returned block exists in the
main fork, failing with "could not read block" errors if that doesn't
hold.  Make that assumption reliable now.  It hadn't been guaranteed,
due to the weak WAL and data ordering of participating components.  Most
operations on the fsm fork are not WAL-logged.  Relation extension is
not WAL-logged.  Hence, an fsm-fork block on disk can reference a
main-fork block that no WAL record has initialized.  That could happen
after an OS crash, a replica promote, or a PITR restore.  wal_log_hints
makes the trouble easier to hit; a replica promote or PITR ending just
after a relevant fsm-fork FPI_FOR_HINT may yield this broken state.  The
v16 RelationAddBlocks() mechanism also makes the trouble easier to hit,
since it bulk-extends even without extension lock waiters.  Commit
917dc7d2393ce680dea7a59418be9ff341df3c14 stopped trouble around
truncation, but vectors involving PageIsNew() pages remained.

This implementation adds a RelationGetNumberOfBlocks() call when the
cached relation size doesn't confirm a block exists.  We've been unable
to identify a benchmark that slows materially, but this may show up as
additional time in lseek().  An alternative without that overhead would
be a new ReadBufferMode such that ReadBufferExtended() returns NULL
after a 0-byte read, with all other errors handled normally.  However,
each GetFreeIndexPage() caller would then need code for the return-NULL
case.  Back-patch to v14, due to earlier versions not caching relation
size and the absence of a pre-v16 problem report.

Ronan Dunklau.  Reported by Ronan Dunklau.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1878547.tdWV9SEqCh%40aivenlaptop
2024-04-13 08:35:32 -07:00
b714bc40cf Fix WaitEventSet resource leak in WaitLatchOrSocket().
This function would have the same issue we solved in commit 501cfd07d:
If an error is thrown after calling CreateWaitEventSet(), the file
descriptor (on epoll- or kqueue-based systems) or handles (on Windows)
that the WaitEventSet contains are leaked.

Like that commit, use PG_TRY-PG_FINALLY (PG_TRY-PG_CATCH in v12) to make
sure the WaitEventSet is freed properly.

Back-patch to all supported versions, but as we do not have this issue
in HEAD (cf. commit 50c67c201), no need to apply this patch to it.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPmGK16MqdDoD8oatp8SQWaEa4vS3nfQqDN_Sj9YRuu5J3Lj9g%40mail.gmail.com
2024-04-11 19:05:04 +09:00
dc5824a06e Fix plpgsql's handling of -- comments following expressions.
Up to now, read_sql_construct() has collected all the source text from
the statement or expression's initial token up to the character just
before the "until" token.  It normally tries to strip trailing
whitespace from that, largely for neatness.  If there was a "-- text"
comment after the expression, this resulted in removing the newline
that terminates the comment, which creates a hazard if we try to paste
the collected text into a larger SQL construct without inserting a
newline after it.  In particular this caused our handling of CASE
constructs to fail if there's a comment after a WHEN expression.

Commit 4adead1d2 noticed a similar problem with cursor arguments,
and worked around it through the rather crude hack of suppressing
the whitespace-trimming behavior for those.  Rather than do that
and leave the hazard open for future hackers to trip over, let's
fix it properly.  pl_scanner.c already has enough infrastructure
to report the end location of the expression's last token, so
we can copy up to that location and never collect any trailing
whitespace or comment to begin with.

Erik Wienhold and Tom Lane, per report from Michal Bartak.
Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAVzF_FjRoi8fOVuLCZhQJx6HATQ7MKm=aFOHWZODFnLmjX-xA@mail.gmail.com
2024-04-10 15:45:59 -04:00
7fe32eaa4a Fix illegal attribute propagation in LLVM JIT.
Commit 72559438 started copying more attributes from AttributeTemplate
to the functions we generate on the fly.  In the case of deform
functions, which return void, this meant that "noundef", from
AttributeTemplate's return value (a Datum) was copied to a void type.
Older LLVM releases were OK with that, but LLVM 18 crashes.

Update our llvm_copy_attributes() function to skip copying the attribute
for the return value, if the target function returns void.

Thanks to Dmitry Dolgov for help chasing this down.

Back-patch to all supported releases, like 72559438.

Reported-by: Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Dolgov <9erthalion6@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFj8pRACpVFr7LMdVYENUkScG5FCYMZDDdSGNU-tch%2Bw98OxYg%40mail.gmail.com
2024-04-10 12:15:07 +12:00
25ee58e8f2 simplehash: Free collisions array in SH_STAT
While SH_STAT() is only used for debugging, the allocated array can be large,
and therefore should be freed.

It's unclear why coverity started warning now.

Reported-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Reported-by: Coverity
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3005248.1712538233@sss.pgh.pa.us
Backpatch: 12-
2024-04-07 19:09:05 -07:00
3d5a9bb8df Don't clobber test exit code at cleanup in LDAP/Kerberors tests
If the test script die()d before running the first test, the whole test
was interpreted as SKIPped rather than failed. The PostgreSQL::Cluster
module got this right.

Backpatch to all supported versions.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/fb898a70-3a88-4629-88e9-f2375020061d@iki.fi
2024-04-07 20:23:22 +03:00
1843a27efb Improve check in LDAP test to find the OpenLDAP installation
If the OpenLDAP installation directory is not found, set $setup to 0
so that the LDAP tests are skipped. The macOS checks were already
doing that, but the checks on other OS's were not. While we're at it,
improve the error message when the tests are skipped, to specify
whether the OS is supported at all, or if we just didn't find the
installation directory.

This was accidentally "working" without this, i.e. we were skipping
the tests if the OpenLDAP installation was not found, because of a bug
in the LdapServer test module: the END block clobbered the exit code
so if the script die()s before running the first subtest, the whole
test script was marked as SKIPped. The next commit will fix that bug,
but we need to fix the setup code first.

These checks should probably go into configure/meson, but this is
better than nothing and allows fixing the bug in the END block.

Backpatch to all supported versions.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/fb898a70-3a88-4629-88e9-f2375020061d@iki.fi
2024-04-07 20:23:18 +03:00
d3167ed3f7 Fix ecpg's mechanism for detecting unsupported cases in the grammar.
ecpg wants to emit a warning if it parses a SQL construct that the
backend can parse but will immediately throw a FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED
error for.  The way it was testing for this was to see if the string
ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED appeared anywhere in the gram.y code.
This is, of course, not nearly good enough, as there are plenty of
rules in gram.y that throw that error only conditionally.  There was
a hack dating to 2008 to suppress the warning in one rule that
doesn't even exist anymore, but nothing for other cases we've created
since then.  End result was that you could get "unsupported feature
will be passed to server" warnings while compiling perfectly good SQL
code in ecpg.  Somehow we'd not heard complaints about this, but
it was exposed by the recent addition of an ecpg test for a SQL/JSON
construct.

To fix, suppress the warning if the rule contains any "if" statement.
Manual comparison of gram.y with the generated preproc.y file shows
that the warning is now emitted only in rules where it's sensible.

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

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/603615.1712245382@sss.pgh.pa.us
2024-04-04 15:31:53 -04:00
e10ca95ff7 Fix bogus coding in ExecAppendAsyncEventWait().
No configured-by-FDW events would result in "return" directly out of a
PG_TRY block, making the exception stack dangling.  Repair.

Oversight in commit 501cfd07d; back-patch to v14, like that commit, but
as we do not have this issue in HEAD (cf. commit 50c67c201), no need to
apply this patch to it.

In passing, improve a comment about the handling of in-process requests
in a postgres_fdw.c function called from this function.

Alexander Pyhalov, with comment adjustment/improvement by me.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/425fa29a429b21b0332737c42a4fdc70%40postgrespro.ru
2024-04-04 17:25:04 +09:00
19b8481b42 Fix the parameters order for TableAmRoutine.relation_copy_for_cluster()
Specify OldTable first, NewTable second as used by
table_relation_copy_for_cluster() and as implemented in
heapam_relation_copy_for_cluster().

Backpatch to PostgreSQL 12, where TableAmRoutine was introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ME3P282MB3166860D4911AE82F92DF7C5B63F2%40ME3P282MB3166.AUSP282.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM
Author: Japin Li
Reviewed-by: Pavel Borisov
Backpatch-through: 12
2024-04-03 21:31:04 +03:00
ca392df8dd Avoid deadlock during orphan temp table removal.
If temp tables have dependencies (such as sequences) then it's
possible for autovacuum's cleanup of orphan temp tables to deadlock
against an incoming backend that's trying to clean out the temp
namespace for its own use.  That can happen because RemoveTempRelations'
performDeletion call can visit objects within the namespace in
an order different from the order in which a per-table deletion
will visit them.

To fix, observe that performDeletion will begin by taking an exclusive
lock on the temp namespace (even though it won't actually delete it).
So, if we can get a shared lock on the namespace, we can be sure we're
not running concurrently with RemoveTempRelations, while also not
conflicting with ordinary use of the namespace.  This requires
introducing a conditional version of LockDatabaseObject, but that's no
big deal.  (It's surprising we've got along without that this long.)

Report and patch by Mikhail Zhilin.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c43ce028-2bc2-4865-9b89-3f706246eed5@postgrespro.ru
2024-04-02 14:59:04 -04:00
0de5274f59 Avoid "unused variable" warning on non-USE_SSL_ENGINE platforms.
If we are building with openssl but USE_SSL_ENGINE didn't get set,
initialize_SSL's variable "pkey" is declared but used nowhere.
Apparently this combination hasn't been exercised in the buildfarm
before now, because I've not seen this warning before, even though
the code has been like this a long time.  Move the declaration
to silence the warning (and remove its useless initialization).

Per buildfarm member sawshark.  Back-patch to all supported branches.
2024-04-01 19:01:18 -04:00