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release-6-3
${ noResults }
414 Commits (dad9ba1c82fd985aa6fb8035ebca1e79c138dde2)
| Author | SHA1 | Message | Date |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
c2bb02bc2e |
Allow asynchronous execution in more cases.
In commit
|
4 years ago |
|
|
f3dd9fe1dd |
Fix postgres_fdw to check shippability of sort clauses properly.
postgres_fdw would push ORDER BY clauses to the remote side without
verifying that the sort operator is safe to ship. Moreover, it failed
to print a suitable USING clause if the sort operator isn't default
for the sort expression's type. The net result of this is that the
remote sort might not have anywhere near the semantics we expect,
which'd be disastrous for locally-performed merge joins in particular.
We addressed similar issues in the context of ORDER BY within an
aggregate function call in commit
|
4 years ago |
|
|
db0d67db24 |
Optimize order of GROUP BY keys
When evaluating a query with a multi-column GROUP BY clause using sort, the cost may be heavily dependent on the order in which the keys are compared when building the groups. Grouping does not imply any ordering, so we're allowed to compare the keys in arbitrary order, and a Hash Agg leverages this. But for Group Agg, we simply compared keys in the order as specified in the query. This commit explores alternative ordering of the keys, trying to find a cheaper one. In principle, we might generate grouping paths for all permutations of the keys, and leave the rest to the optimizer. But that might get very expensive, so we try to pick only a couple interesting orderings based on both local and global information. When planning the grouping path, we explore statistics (number of distinct values, cost of the comparison function) for the keys and reorder them to minimize comparison costs. Intuitively, it may be better to perform more expensive comparisons (for complex data types etc.) last, because maybe the cheaper comparisons will be enough. Similarly, the higher the cardinality of a key, the lower the probability we’ll need to compare more keys. The patch generates and costs various orderings, picking the cheapest ones. The ordering of group keys may interact with other parts of the query, some of which may not be known while planning the grouping. E.g. there may be an explicit ORDER BY clause, or some other ordering-dependent operation, higher up in the query, and using the same ordering may allow using either incremental sort or even eliminate the sort entirely. The patch generates orderings and picks those minimizing the comparison cost (for various pathkeys), and then adds orderings that might be useful for operations higher up in the plan (ORDER BY, etc.). Finally, it always keeps the ordering specified in the query, on the assumption the user might have additional insights. This introduces a new GUC enable_group_by_reordering, so that the optimization may be disabled if needed. The original patch was proposed by Teodor Sigaev, and later improved and reworked by Dmitry Dolgov. Reviews by a number of people, including me, Andrey Lepikhov, Claudio Freire, Ibrar Ahmed and Zhihong Yu. Author: Dmitry Dolgov, Teodor Sigaev, Tomas Vondra Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra, Andrey Lepikhov, Claudio Freire, Ibrar Ahmed, Zhihong Yu Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7c79e6a5-8597-74e8-0671-1c39d124c9d6%40sigaev.ru Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2Bq6zcW_4o2NC0zutLkOJPsFt80megSpX_dVRo6GK9PC-Jx_Ag%40mail.gmail.com |
4 years ago |
|
|
5656683503 |
postgres_fdw: Minor cleanup for pgfdw_abort_cleanup().
Commit
|
4 years ago |
|
|
5b81703787 |
Simplify SRFs using materialize mode in contrib/ modules
|
4 years ago |
|
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04e706d423 |
postgres_fdw: Add support for parallel commit.
postgres_fdw commits remote (sub)transactions opened on remote server(s) in a local (sub)transaction one by one when the local (sub)transaction commits. This patch allows it to commit the remote (sub)transactions in parallel to improve performance. This is enabled by the server option "parallel_commit". The default is false. Etsuro Fujita, reviewed by Fujii Masao and David Zhang. Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAPmGK17dAZCXvwnfpr1eTfknTGdt%3DhYTV9405Gt5SqPOX8K84w%40mail.gmail.com |
4 years ago |
|
|
88103567cb |
Disallow setting bogus GUCs within an extension's reserved namespace.
Commit |
4 years ago |
|
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94c49d5340 |
postgres_fdw: Make postgres_fdw.application_name support more escape sequences.
Commit
|
4 years ago |
|
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d61a361d1a |
Remove all traces of tuplestore_donestoring() in the C code
This routine is a no-op since
|
4 years ago |
|
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9e283fc85d |
postgres_fdw: Fix handling of a pending asynchronous request in postgresReScanForeignScan().
Commit
|
4 years ago |
|
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6c07f9ebce |
postgres_fdw: Fix subabort cleanup of connections used in asynchronous execution.
Commit
|
4 years ago |
|
|
941460fcf7 |
Add Boolean node
Before, SQL-level boolean constants were represented by a string with a cast, and internal Boolean values in DDL commands were usually represented by Integer nodes. This takes the place of both of these uses, making the intent clearer and having some amount of type safety. Reviewed-by: Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com> Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/8c1a2e37-c68d-703c-5a83-7a6077f4f997@enterprisedb.com |
4 years ago |
|
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27b77ecf9f |
Update copyright for 2022
Backpatch-through: 10 |
4 years ago |
|
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353aa01687 |
postgres_fdw: Add regression test for postgres_fdw.application_name GUC.
Commit |
4 years ago |
|
|
cab5b9ab2c |
Revert changes about warnings/errors for placeholders.
Revert commits |
4 years ago |
|
|
5609cc01c6 |
Rename EmitWarningsOnPlaceholders() to MarkGUCPrefixReserved().
This seems like a clearer name for what it does now. Provide a compatibility macro so that extensions don't have to convert to the new name right away. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/116024.1640111629@sss.pgh.pa.us |
4 years ago |
|
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5e64ad3697 |
postgres_fdw: Revert unstable tests for postgres_fdw.application_name.
Commit
|
4 years ago |
|
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6e0cb3dec1 |
postgres_fdw: Allow postgres_fdw.application_name to include escape sequences.
application_name that used when postgres_fdw establishes a connection to a foreign server can be specified in either or both a connection parameter of a server object and GUC postgres_fdw.application_name. This commit allows those parameters to include escape sequences that begins with % character. Then postgres_fdw replaces those escape sequences with status information. For example, %d and %u are replaced with user name and database name in local server, respectively. This feature enables us to add information more easily to track remote transactions or queries, into application_name of a remote connection. Author: Hayato Kuroda Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi, Masahiro Ikeda, Hou Zhijie, Fujii Masao Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/TYAPR01MB5866FAE71C66547C64616584F5EB9@TYAPR01MB5866.jpnprd01.prod.outlook.com Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/TYCPR01MB5870D1E8B949DAF6D3B84E02F5F29@TYCPR01MB5870.jpnprd01.prod.outlook.com |
4 years ago |
|
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2e577c9446 |
Remove assertion for ALTER TABLE .. DETACH PARTITION CONCURRENTLY
One code path related to this flavor of ALTER TABLE was checking that
the relation to detach has to be a normal table or a partitioned table,
which would fail if using the command with a different relation kind.
Views, sequences and materialized views cannot be part of a partition
tree, so these would cause the command to fail anyway, but the assertion
was triggered. Foreign tables can be part of a partition tree, and
again the assertion would have failed. The simplest solution is just to
remove this assertion, so as we get the same failure as the
non-concurrent code path.
While on it, add a regression test in postgres_fdw for the concurrent
partition detach of a foreign table, as per a suggestion from Alexander
Lakhin.
Issue introduced in
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4 years ago |
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1fada5d81e |
Add missing EmitWarningsOnPlaceholders() calls.
Extensions that define any custom GUCs should call EmitWarningsOnPlaceholders after doing so, to help catch misspellings. Many of our contrib modules hadn't gotten the memo on that, though. Also add such calls to src/test/modules extensions that have GUCs. While these aren't really user-facing, they should illustrate good practice not faulty practice. Shinya Kato Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/524fa2c0a34f34b68fbfa90d0760d515@oss.nttdata.com |
4 years ago |
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815d61fcd4 |
postgres_fdw: Report warning when timeout expires while getting query result.
When aborting remote transaction or sending cancel request to a remote server, postgres_fdw calls pgfdw_get_cleanup_result() to wait for the result of transaction abort query or cancel request to arrive. It fails to get the result if the timeout expires or a connection trouble happens. Previously postgres_fdw reported no warning message even when the timeout expired or a connection trouble happened in pgfdw_get_cleanup_result(). This could make the troubleshooting harder when such an event occurred. This commit makes pgfdw_get_cleanup_result() tell its caller what trouble (timeout or connection error) occurred, on failure, and also makes its caller report the proper warning message based on that information. Author: Fujii Masao Reviewed-by: Bharath Rupireddy Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15aa988c-722e-ad3e-c936-4420c5b2bfea@oss.nttdata.com |
4 years ago |
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557c39bba9 |
postgres_fdw: Fix unexpected reporting of empty message.
pgfdw_report_error() in postgres_fdw gets a message from PGresult or PGconn to report an error received from a remote server. Previously if it could get a message from neither of them, it reported empty message unexpectedly. The cause of this issue was that pgfdw_report_error() didn't handle properly the case where no message could be obtained and its local variable message_primary was set to '\0'. This commit improves pgfdw_report_error() so that it reports the message "could not obtain ..." when it gets no message and message_primary is set to '\0'. This is the same behavior as when message_primary is NULL. dblink_res_error() in dblink has the same issue, so this commit also improves it in the same way. Back-patch to all supported branches. Author: Fujii Masao Reviewed-by: Bharath Rupireddy Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/477c16c8-7ea4-20fc-38d5-ed3a77ed616c@oss.nttdata.com |
4 years ago |
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ac0db34e0e |
Remove PF_USED_FOR_ASSERTS_ONLY from variables in general use
fsstate in process_pending_requests (in postgres_fdw.c) was added in |
4 years ago |
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3804539e48 |
Replace random(), pg_erand48(), etc with a better PRNG API and algorithm.
Standardize on xoroshiro128** as our basic PRNG algorithm, eliminating a bunch of platform dependencies as well as fundamentally-obsolete PRNG code. In addition, this API replacement will ease replacing the algorithm again in future, should that become necessary. xoroshiro128** is a few percent slower than the drand48 family, but it can produce full-width 64-bit random values not only 48-bit, and it should be much more trustworthy. It's likely to be noticeably faster than the platform's random(), depending on which platform you are thinking about; and we can have non-global state vectors easily, unlike with random(). It is not cryptographically strong, but neither are the functions it replaces. Fabien Coelho, reviewed by Dean Rasheed, Aleksander Alekseev, and myself Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.22.394.2105241211230.165418@pseudo |
4 years ago |
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e502150f7d |
Allow Memoize to operate in binary comparison mode
Memoize would always use the hash equality operator for the cache key types to determine if the current set of parameters were the same as some previously cached set. Certain types such as floating points where -0.0 and +0.0 differ in their binary representation but are classed as equal by the hash equality operator may cause problems as unless the join uses the same operator it's possible that whichever join operator is being used would be able to distinguish the two values. In which case we may accidentally return in the incorrect rows out of the cache. To fix this here we add a binary mode to Memoize to allow it to the current set of parameters to previously cached values by comparing bit-by-bit rather than logically using the hash equality operator. This binary mode is always used for LATERAL joins and it's used for normal joins when any of the join operators are not hashable. Reported-by: Tom Lane Author: David Rowley Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3004308.1632952496@sss.pgh.pa.us Backpatch-through: 14, where Memoize was added |
4 years ago |
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aa12781b0d |
Improve publication error messages
Commit
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4 years ago |
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f8abb0f5e1 |
postgres_fdw: suppress casts on constants in limited cases.
When deparsing an expression of the form "remote_var OP constant", we'd normally apply a cast to the constant to make sure that the remote parser thinks it's of the same type we do. However, doing so is often not necessary, and it causes problems if the user has intentionally declared the local column as being of a different type than the remote column. A plausible use-case for that is using text to represent a type that's an enum on the remote side. A comparison on such a column will get shipped as "var = 'foo'::text", which blows up on the remote side because there's no enum = text operator. But if we simply leave off the explicit cast, the comparison will do exactly what the user wants. It's possible to do this without major risk of semantic problems, by relying on the longstanding parser heuristic that "if one operand of an operator is of type unknown, while the other one has a known type, assume that the unknown operand is also of that type". Hence, this patch leaves off the cast only if (a) the operator inputs have the same type locally; (b) the constant will print as a string literal or NULL, both of which are initially taken as type unknown; and (c) the non-Const input is a plain foreign Var. Rule (c) guarantees that the remote parser will know the type of the non-Const input; moreover, it means that if this cast-omission does cause any semantic surprises, that can only happen in cases where the local column has a different type than the remote column. That wasn't guaranteed to work anyway, and this patch should represent a net usability gain for such cases. One point that I (tgl) remain slightly uncomfortable with is that we will ignore an implicit RelabelType when deciding if the non-Const input is a plain Var. That makes it a little squishy to argue that the remote should resolve the Const as being of the same type as its Var, because then our Const is not the same type as our Var. However, if we don't do that, then this hack won't work as desired if the user chooses to use varchar rather than text to represent some remote column. That seems useful, so do it like this for now. We might have to give up the RelabelType-ignoring bit if any problems surface. Dian Fay, with review and kibitzing by me Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/C9LU294V7K4F.34LRRDU449O45@lamia |
4 years ago |
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5fedf7417b |
Improve HINT message that FDW reports when there are no valid options.
The foreign data wrapper's validator function provides a HINT message with
list of valid options for the object specified in CREATE or ALTER command,
when the option given in the command is invalid. Previously
postgresql_fdw_validator() and the validator functions for postgres_fdw and
dblink_fdw worked in that way even there were no valid options in the object,
which could lead to the HINT message with empty list (because there were
no valid options). For example, ALTER FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER postgres_fdw
OPTIONS (format 'csv') reported the following ERROR and HINT messages.
This behavior was confusing.
ERROR: invalid option "format"
HINT: Valid options in this context are:
There is no such issue in file_fdw. The validator function for file_fdw
reports the HINT message "There are no valid options in this context."
instead in that case.
This commit improves postgresql_fdw_validator() and the validator functions
for postgres_fdw and dblink_fdw so that they do likewise. For example,
this change causes the above ALTER FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER command to
report the following messages.
ERROR: invalid option "nonexistent"
HINT: There are no valid options in this context.
Author: Kosei Masumura
Reviewed-by: Bharath Rupireddy, Fujii Masao
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/557d06cebe19081bfcc83ee2affc98d3@oss.nttdata.com
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4 years ago |
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8c7be86883 |
postgres_fdw: Move comments about elog level in (sub)abort cleanup.
The comments were misplaced when adding postgres_fdw. Fix that by moving the comments to more appropriate functions. Author: Etsuro Fujita Backpatch-through: 9.6 Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPmGK164sAXQtC46mDFyu6d-T25Mzvh5qaRNkit06VMmecYnOA%40mail.gmail.com |
4 years ago |
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972c7c6567 |
postgres_fdw: Fix comments in connection.c.
Commit
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4 years ago |
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3071bbfe44 |
Fix null-pointer crash in postgres_fdw's conversion_error_callback.
Commit
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4 years ago |
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85c6961128 |
postgres_fdw: Refactor transaction rollback code to avoid code duplication.
In postgres_fdw, pgfdw_xact_callback() and pgfdw_subxact_callback() callback functions do almost the same thing to rollback remote toplevel- and sub-transaction. But previously their such rollback logics were implemented separately in each function and in different way. Which could decrease the readability and maintainability of the code. To fix the issue, this commit creates the common function to rollback remote transactions, and makes those callback functions use it. Which allows us to avoid unnecessary code duplication. Author: Fujii Masao Reviewed-by: Zhihong Yu, Bharath Rupireddy Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/62fbb63a-d46c-fb47-a56d-f6be1909aa44@oss.nttdata.com |
4 years ago |
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b073c3ccd0 |
Revoke PUBLIC CREATE from public schema, now owned by pg_database_owner.
This switches the default ACL to what the documentation has recommended since CVE-2018-1058. Upgrades will carry forward any old ownership and ACL. Sites that declined the 2018 recommendation should take a fresh look. Recipes for commissioning a new database cluster from scratch may need to create a schema, grant more privileges, etc. Out-of-tree test suites may require such updates. Reviewed by Peter Eisentraut. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20201031163518.GB4039133@rfd.leadboat.com |
4 years ago |
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639a86e36a |
Remove Value node struct
The Value node struct is a weird construct. It is its own node type, but most of the time, it actually has a node type of Integer, Float, String, or BitString. As a consequence, the struct name and the node type don't match most of the time, and so it has to be treated specially a lot. There doesn't seem to be any value in the special construct. There is very little code that wants to accept all Value variants but nothing else (and even if it did, this doesn't provide any convenient way to check it), and most code wants either just one particular node type (usually String), or it accepts a broader set of node types besides just Value. This change removes the Value struct and node type and replaces them by separate Integer, Float, String, and BitString node types that are proper node types and structs of their own and behave mostly like normal node types. Also, this removes the T_Null node tag, which was previously also a possible variant of Value but wasn't actually used outside of the Value contained in A_Const. Replace that by an isnull field in A_Const. Reviewed-by: Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker <ilmari@ilmari.org> Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com> Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/5ba6bc5b-3f95-04f2-2419-f8ddb4c046fb@enterprisedb.com |
4 years ago |
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98dbef90eb |
postgres_fdw: Revert unstable tests for postgres_fdw.application_name.
Commit
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4 years ago |
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449ab63505 |
postgres_fdw: Allow application_name of remote connection to be set via GUC.
This commit adds postgres_fdw.application_name GUC which specifies a value for application_name configuration parameter used when postgres_fdw establishes a connection to a foreign server. This GUC setting always overrides application_name option of the foreign server object. This GUC is useful when we want to specify our own application_name per remote connection. Previously application_name of a remote connection could be set basically only via options of a server object. But which meant that every session connecting to the same foreign server basically should use the same application_name. Also if we want to change the setting, we had to execute "ALTER SERVER ... OPTIONS ..." command. It was inconvenient. Author: Hayato Kuroda Reviewed-by: Masahiro Ikeda, Fujii Masao Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/TYCPR01MB5870D1E8B949DAF6D3B84E02F5F29@TYCPR01MB5870.jpnprd01.prod.outlook.com |
4 years ago |
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2dc53fe2a7 |
Refactor postgresImportForeignSchema to avoid code duplication.
Avoid repeating fragments of the query we're building, along the
same lines as recent cleanup in pg_dump. I got annoyed about this
because
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4 years ago |
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aa769f80ed |
postgres_fdw: Fix issues with generated columns in foreign tables.
postgres_fdw imported generated columns from the remote tables as plain columns, and caused failures like "ERROR: cannot insert a non-DEFAULT value into column "foo"" when inserting into the foreign tables, as it tried to insert values into the generated columns. To fix, we do the following under the assumption that generated columns in a postgres_fdw foreign table are defined so that they represent generated columns in the underlying remote table: * Send DEFAULT for the generated columns to the foreign server on insert or update, not generated column values computed on the local server. * Add to postgresImportForeignSchema() an option "import_generated" to include column generated expressions in the definitions of foreign tables imported from a foreign server. The option is true by default. The assumption seems reasonable, because that would make a query of the postgres_fdw foreign table return values for the generated columns that are consistent with the generated expression. While here, fix another issue in postgresImportForeignSchema(): it tried to include column generated expressions as column default expressions in the foreign table definitions when the import_default option was enabled. Per bug #16631 from Daniel Cherniy. Back-patch to v12 where generated columns were added. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16631-e929fe9db0ffc7cf%40postgresql.org |
4 years ago |
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a8ed9bd59d |
Fix oversight in commit 1ec7fca859.
I failed to account for the possibility that when ExecAppendAsyncEventWait() notifies multiple async-capable nodes using postgres_fdw, a preceding node might invoke process_pending_request() to process a pending asynchronous request made by a succeeding node. In that case the succeeding node should produce a tuple to return to the parent Append node from tuples fetched by process_pending_request() when notified. Repair. Per buildfarm via Michael Paquier. Back-patch to v14, like the previous commit. Thanks to Tom Lane for testing. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/YQP0UPT8KmPiHTMs%40paquier.xyz |
4 years ago |
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5d44fff01e |
In postgres_fdw, allow CASE expressions to be pushed to the remote server.
This is simple enough except for the need to check whether CaseTestExpr nodes have a collation that is not derived from a remote Var. For that, examine the CASE's "arg" expression and then pass that info down into the recursive examination of the WHEN expressions. Alexander Pyhalov, reviewed by Gilles Darold and myself Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/fda09032e90d85d9b726a41e03f9097f@postgrespro.ru |
4 years ago |
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1ec7fca859 |
postgres_fdw: Fix handling of pending asynchronous requests.
A pending asynchronous request is handled by process_pending_request(),
which previously not only processed an in-progress remote query but
performed ExecForeignScan() to produce a tuple to return to the local
server asynchronously from the result of the remote query. But that led
to a server crash when executing a query or led to an "InstrStartNode
called twice in a row" or "InstrEndLoop called on running node" failure
when doing EXPLAIN ANALYZE of it, in cases where the plan tree for it
contained multiple async-capable nodes accessing the same
initplan/subplan that contained multiple async-capable nodes scanning
the same foreign tables as for the parent async-capable nodes, as
reported by Andrey Lepikhov. The reason is that the second step in
process_pending_request() invoked when executing the initplan/subplan
for one of the parent async-capable nodes caused recursive execution of
the initplan/subplan for another of the parent async-capable nodes.
To fix, split process_pending_request() into the two steps and postpone
the second step until ForeignAsyncConfigureWait() is called for each of
the pending asynchronous requests. Also, in ExecAppendAsyncEventWait()
we assumed that FDWs would register at least one wait event in a
WaitEventSet created there when they were called from
ForeignAsyncConfigureWait() in that function, but allow FDWs to register
zero wait events in the WaitEventSet; modify ExecAppendAsyncEventWait()
to just return in that case.
Oversight in commit
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4 years ago |
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0e1275fb07 |
Avoid using ambiguous word "non-negative" in error messages.
The error messages using the word "non-negative" are confusing because it's ambiguous about whether it accepts zero or not. This commit improves those error messages by replacing it with less ambiguous word like "greater than zero" or "greater than or equal to zero". Also this commit added the note about the word "non-negative" to the error message style guide, to help writing the new error messages. When postgres_fdw option fetch_size was set to zero, previously the error message "fetch_size requires a non-negative integer value" was reported. This error message was outright buggy. Therefore back-patch to all supported versions where such buggy error message could be thrown. Reported-by: Hou Zhijie Author: Bharath Rupireddy Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi, Fujii Masao Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/OS0PR01MB5716415335A06B489F1B3A8194569@OS0PR01MB5716.jpnprd01.prod.outlook.com |
4 years ago |
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48c5c90682 |
Use the "pg_temp" schema alias in EXPLAIN and related output.
This patch causes EXPLAIN output to refer to objects that are in the current session's temp schema with the "pg_temp" schema alias rather than that schema's actual name. This is useful for our own testing purposes since it will stabilize EXPLAIN VERBOSE output for such cases, allowing us to use that in regression tests. It should be less confusing for end users too. Since ruleutils.c needs to change behavior for this, the change also leaks into a few other users of ruleutils.c, for example pg_get_viewdef(). AFAICS that won't cause any problems. We did find that aggressively trying to change this behavior across-the-board would cause issues, but as long as "pg_temp" only appears within generated SQL text, I think it'll be fine. Along the way, make get_namespace_name_or_temp conform to the same API as get_namespace_name, ie that it returns a palloc'd string or NULL. The current behavior hasn't caused any bugs since no callers attempt to pfree the result, but if it gets more widespread usage that could become a problem. Amul Sul, reviewed and extended by me Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAJ_b97W=QaGmag9AhWNbmx3uEYsNkXWL+OVW1_E1D3BtgWvtw@mail.gmail.com |
4 years ago |
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83f4fcc655 |
Change the name of the Result Cache node to Memoize
"Result Cache" was never a great name for this node, but nobody managed to come up with another name that anyone liked enough. That was until David Johnston mentioned "Node Memoization", which Tom Lane revised to just "Memoize". People seem to like "Memoize", so let's do the rename. Reviewed-by: Justin Pryzby Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210708165145.GG1176@momjian.us Backpatch-through: 14, where Result Cache was introduced |
4 years ago |
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d68a003912 |
Rename debug_invalidate_system_caches_always to debug_discard_caches.
The name introduced by commit
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4 years ago |
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b9734c13f1 |
Fix crash in postgres_fdw for provably-empty remote UPDATE/DELETE.
In
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5 years ago |
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d854720df6 |
postgres_fdw: Tighten up allowed values for batch_size, fetch_size options.
Previously the values such as '100$%$#$#', '9,223,372,' were accepted and treated as valid integers for postgres_fdw options batch_size and fetch_size. Whereas this is not the case with fdw_startup_cost and fdw_tuple_cost options for which an error is thrown. This was because endptr was not used while converting strings to integers using strtol. This commit changes the logic so that it uses parse_int function instead of strtol as it serves the purpose by returning false in case if it is unable to convert the string to integer. Note that this function also rounds off the values such as '100.456' to 100 and '100.567' or '100.678' to 101. While on this, use parse_real for fdw_startup_cost and fdw_tuple_cost options. Since parse_int and parse_real are being used for reloptions and GUCs, it is more appropriate to use in postgres_fdw rather than using strtol and strtod directly. Back-patch to v14. Author: Bharath Rupireddy Reviewed-by: Ashutosh Bapat, Tom Lane, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Fujii Masao Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALj2ACVMO6wY5Pc4oe1OCgUOAtdjHuFsBDw8R5uoYR86eWFQDA@mail.gmail.com |
5 years ago |
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c7b7311f61 |
Avoid doing catalog lookups in postgres_fdw's conversion_error_callback.
As in
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5 years ago |
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8021770909 |
Further stabilize postgres_fdw test.
The queries involving ft1_nopw don't stably return the same row anymore. I surmise that an autovacuum hitting "S 1"."T 1" right after the updates introduced by f61db909d/5843659d0 freed some space, changing where subsequent insertions get stored. It's only by good luck that these results were stable before, though, since a LIMIT without ORDER BY isn't well defined, and it's not like we've ever treated that table as append-only in this test script. Since we only really care whether these commands succeed or not, just replace "SELECT *" with "SELECT 1". Report: https://buildfarm.postgresql.org/cgi-bin/show_log.pl?nm=crake&dt=2021-06-23%2019%3A52%3A08 |
5 years ago |
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5843659d09 |
Stabilize test case added by commit f61db909d.
Buildfarm members ayu and tern have sometimes shown a different plan than expected for this query. I'd been unable to reproduce that before today, but I finally realized what is happening. If there is a concurrent open transaction (probably an autovacuum run in the buildfarm, but this can also be arranged manually), then the index entries for the rows removed by the DELETE a few lines up are not killed promptly, causing a change in the planner's estimate of the extremal value of ft2.c1, which moves the rowcount estimate for "c1 > 1100" by enough to change the join plan from nestloop to hash. To fix, change the query condition to "c1 > 1000", causing the hash plan to be preferred whether or not a concurrent open transaction exists. Since this UPDATE is tailored to be a no-op, nothing else changes. Report: https://buildfarm.postgresql.org/cgi-bin/show_log.pl?nm=ayu&dt=2021-06-09%2022%3A45%3A48 Report: https://buildfarm.postgresql.org/cgi-bin/show_log.pl?nm=ayu&dt=2021-06-13%2022%3A38%3A18 Report: https://buildfarm.postgresql.org/cgi-bin/show_log.pl?nm=tern&dt=2021-06-20%2004%3A55%3A36 |
5 years ago |