- Aug 25, 1998
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Bruce Momjian authored
rewrite system. Restructure parse_target to make it easier to understand.
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- Aug 24, 1998
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Bruce Momjian authored
patch is applied: Rewrite rules on relation level work fine now. Event qualifications on insert/update/delete rules work fine now. I added the new keyword OLD to reference the CURRENT tuple. CURRENT will be removed in 6.5. Update rules can reference NEW and OLD in the rule qualification and the actions. Insert/update/delete rules on views can be established to let them behave like real tables. For insert/update/delete rules multiple actions are supported now. The actions can also be surrounded by parantheses to make psql happy. Multiple actions are required if update to a view requires updates to multiple tables. Regular users are permitted to create/drop rules on tables they have RULE permissions for (DefineQueryRewrite() is now able to get around the access restrictions on pg_rewrite). This enables view creation for regular users too. This required an extra boolean parameter to pg_parse_and_plan() that tells to set skipAcl on all rangetable entries of the resulting queries. There is a new function pg_exec_query_acl_override() that could be used by backend utilities to use this facility. All rule actions (not only views) inherit the permissions of the event relations owner. Sample: User A creates tables T1 and T2, creates rules that log INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE on T1 in T2 (like in the regression tests for rules I created) and grants ALL but RULE on T1 to user B. User B can now fully access T1 and the logging happens in T2. But user B cannot access T2 at all, only the rule actions can. And due to missing RULE permissions on T1, user B cannot disable logging. Rules on the attribute level are disabled (they don't work properly and since regular users are now permitted to create rules I decided to disable them). Rules on select must have exactly one action that is a select (so select rules must be a view definition). UPDATE NEW/OLD rules are disabled (still broken, but triggers can do it). There are two new system views (pg_rule and pg_view) that show the definition of the rules or views so the db admin can see what the users do. They use two new functions pg_get_ruledef() and pg_get_viewdef() that are builtins. The functions pg_get_ruledef() and pg_get_viewdef() could be used to implement rule and view support in pg_dump. PostgreSQL is now the only database system I know, that has rewrite rules on the query level. All others (where I found a rule statement at all) use stored database procedures or the like (triggers as we call them) for active rules (as some call them). Future of the rule system: The now disabled parts of the rule system (attribute level, multiple actions on select and update new stuff) require a complete new rewrite handler from scratch. The old one is too badly wired up. After 6.4 I'll start to work on a new rewrite handler, that fully supports the attribute level rules, multiple actions on select and update new. This will be available for 6.5 so we get full rewrite rule capabilities. Jan
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Bruce Momjian authored
if MULTIBYTE is not enabled. So be sure to run initdb. o these patches are made against the latest source tree (after Bruce's massive patch, I think) BTW, I noticed that after running regression, the oid field of pg_type seems disappeared. regression=> select oid from pg_type; ERROR: attribute 'oid' not found this happens after the constraints test. This occures with/without my patches. strange... o pg_database_mb.h, pg_class_mb.h, pg_attribute_mb.h are no longer used, and shoud be removed. o GetDatabaseInfo() in utils/misc/database.c removed (actually in #ifdef 0). seems nobody uses. t-ishii@sra.co.jp
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Bruce Momjian authored
is a working 64-bit-int type available. In playing around with it on my machine, I found that gcc provides perfectly fine support for "long long" arithmetic ... but sprintf() and sscanf(), which are system-supplied, don't work :-(. So the autoconf test program does a cursory test on them too. If we find that a lot of systems are like this, it might be worth the trouble to implement binary<->ASCII conversion of int64 ourselves rather than relying on sprintf/sscanf to handle the data type. regards, tom lane
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- Aug 22, 1998
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Bruce Momjian authored
Here are additional patches for the UnixWare 7 port. Summary of changes: In pqcomm.h, use the SUN_LEN macro if it is defined to calculate the size of the sockaddr_un structure. In unixware.h, drop the use of the UNIXWARE macro. Everything can be handled with the USE_UNIVEL_CC and DISABLE_COMPLEX_MACRO macros. In s_lock.h, remove the reference to the UNIXWARE macro (see above). In the unixware template, add the YFLAGS:-d line. In various makefile templates, add (or cleanup) unixware and univel port specific information. -- Billy G. Allie
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- Aug 19, 1998
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
no longer returns buffer pointer, can be gotten from scan; descriptor; bootstrap can create multi-key indexes; pg_procname index now is multi-key index; oidint2, oidint4, oidname are gone (must be removed from regression tests); use System Cache rather than sequential scan in many places; heap_modifytuple no longer takes buffer parameter; remove unused buffer parameter in a few other functions; oid8 is not index-able; remove some use of single-character variable names; cleanup Buffer variables usage and scan descriptor looping; cleaned up allocation and freeing of tuples; 18k lines of diff;
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- Aug 18, 1998
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Marc G. Fournier authored
From: Jan Wieck <jwieck@debis.com> Hi, as proposed here comes the first patch for the query rewrite system. <for details, see archive dated Mon, 17 Aug 1998>
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- Aug 15, 1998
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Thomas G. Lockhart authored
Never seen because the parser frontend converts all trim() calls to btrim(), ltrim(), and rtime() calls before execution.
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- Aug 14, 1998
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Thomas G. Lockhart authored
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- Aug 12, 1998
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Bruce Momjian authored
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- Aug 11, 1998
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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- Aug 10, 1998
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Bruce Momjian authored
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- Aug 09, 1998
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Bruce Momjian authored
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- Aug 06, 1998
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Bruce Momjian authored
files. Fix sequence creation hack for relkind type.
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- Aug 05, 1998
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Marc G. Fournier authored
From: David Hartwig <daybee@bellatlantic.net> I have attached a patch to allow GROUP BY and/or ORDER BY function or expressions. Note worthy items: 1. The expression or function need not be in the target list. Example: SELECT name FROM foo GROUP BY lower(name); 2. Simplified the grammar to use expressions only. 3. Cleaned up earlier patch in this area to make use of existing utility functions. 3. Reduced some of the members in the SortGroupBy parse node. The original data members were redundant with the new expression node. (MUST do a "make clean" now) 4. Added a new parse node "JoinUsing". The JOIN USING clause was overloading this SortGroupBy structure. With the afore mentioned reduction of members, the two clauses lost all their commonality. 5. A bug still exist where, if a function or expression is GROUPed BY, and an aggregate function does not include a attribute from the expression or function, the backend crashes. (or something like that) The bug pre-dates this patch. Example: SELECT lower(a) AS lowcase, count(b) FROM foo GROUP BY lowcase; *** BOOM *** --Also when not in target list SELECT count(b) FROM foo GROUP BY lower(a); *** BOOM AGAIN ***
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- Aug 04, 1998
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Bruce Momjian authored
it is now only mergejoin.
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- Aug 03, 1998
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Bruce Momjian authored
Thanks for Vadim for fixes.
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- Aug 01, 1998
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Marc G. Fournier authored
Adrian Hall reported a problem to me that snprintf() doesn't exist in, at least, Solaris 2.5.1. We use it in backend/utils/adt/int8.c. Add a check to configure so that we see if it exists or not, and, if not, compile in snprintf.c from backend/port, which was taken from, and falls under the same Berkeley license as us, the FreeBSD libc/stdio ...
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Vadim B. Mikheev authored
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- Jul 30, 1998
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Vadim B. Mikheev authored
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- Jul 27, 1998
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Vadim B. Mikheev authored
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Marc G. Fournier authored
Missed a few files in the last round of commits from Tatsuo, as well as needed to run autoconf ...
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- Jul 26, 1998
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Marc G. Fournier authored
From: t-ishii@sra.co.jp As Bruce mentioned, this is due to the conflict among changes we made. Included patches should fix the problem(I changed all MB to MULTIBYTE). Please let me know if you have further problem. P.S. I did not include pathces to configure and gram.c to save the file size(configure.in and gram.y modified).
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- Jul 24, 1998
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Marc G. Fournier authored
I really hope that I haven't missed anything in this one... From: t-ishii@sra.co.jp Attached are patches to enhance the multi-byte support. (patches are against 7/18 snapshot) * determine encoding at initdb/createdb rather than compile time Now initdb/createdb has an option to specify the encoding. Also, I modified the syntax of CREATE DATABASE to accept encoding option. See README.mb for more details. For this purpose I have added new column "encoding" to pg_database. Also pg_attribute and pg_class are changed to catch up the modification to pg_database. Actually I haved added pg_database_mb.h, pg_attribute_mb.h and pg_class_mb.h. These are used only when MB is enabled. The reason having separate files is I couldn't find a way to use ifdef or whatever in those files. I have to admit it looks ugly. No way. * support for PGCLIENTENCODING when issuing COPY command commands/copy.c modified. * support for SQL92 syntax "SET NAMES" See gram.y. * support for LATIN2-5 * add UNICODE regression test case * new test suite for MB New directory test/mb added. * clean up source files Basic idea is to have MB's own subdirectory for easier maintenance. These are include/mb and backend/utils/mb.
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- Jul 21, 1998
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Vadim B. Mikheev authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
calls. Outside a transaction, the backend detects them as buffer leaks; it sends a NOTICE, and frees them. This sometimes cause a segmentation fault (at least on Linux). These indexes are initialized on the first lo_read/lo_write/lo_tell call, and (normally) closed on a lo_close call. Thus the buffer leaks appear when lo direct access functions are used, and not with lo_import/lo_export functions (libpq version calls lo_close before ending the command, and the backend version uses another path). The included patches (against recent snapshot, and against 6.3.2) cause indexes to be closed on transaction end (that is on explicit 'END' statment, or on command termination outside trasaction blocks), thus preventing the buffer leaks while increasing performance inside transactions. Some (all?) 'classic' memory leaks are also removed. I hope it will be ok. --- Pascal ANDRE, graduated from Ecole Centrale Paris andre@via.ecp.fr
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- Jul 20, 1998
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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- Jul 19, 1998
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
now. Here some tested features, (examples included in the patch): 1.1) Subselects in the having clause 1.2) Double nested subselects 1.3) Subselects used in the where clause and in the having clause simultaneously 1.4) Union Selects using having 1.5) Indexes on the base relations are used correctly 1.6) Unallowed Queries are prevented (e.g. qualifications in the having clause that belong to the where clause) 1.7) Insert into as select 2) Queries using the having clause on view relations also work but there are some restrictions: 2.1) Create View as Select ... Having ...; using base tables in the select 2.1.1) The Query rewrite system: 2.1.2) Why are only simple queries allowed against a view from 2.1) ? 2.2) Select ... from testview1, testview2, ... having...; 3) Bug in ExecMergeJoin ?? Regards Stefan
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Bruce Momjian authored
in a more readable form. -- I am submitting the following patches to the June 6, 1998 snapshot of PostgreSQL. These patches implement a port of PostgreSQL to SCO UnixWare 7, and updates the Univel port (UnixWare 2.x). The patched files, and the reason for the patch are: File Reason for the patch --------------- --------------------------------------------------------------- src/backend/port/dynloader/unixware.c src/backend/port/dynloader/unixware.h src/include/port/unixware.h src/makefiles/Makefile.unixware src/template/unixware Created for the UNIXWARE port. src/include/port/univel.h Modifed this file to work with the changes made to s_lock.[ch]. src/backend/storage/buffer/s_lock.c src/include/storage/s_lock.h Moved the UNIXWARE (and Univel) tas() function from s_lock.c to s_lock.h. The UnixWare compiler asm construct is treated as a macro and needs to be in the s_lock.h file. I also reworked the tas() function to correct some errors in the code. src/include/version.h.in The use of the ## operator with quoted strings in the VERSION macro caused problems with the UnixWare C compiler. I removed the ## operators since they were not needed in this case. The macro expands into a sequence of quoted strings that will be concatenated by any ANSI C compiler. src/config.guess This script was modified to recognize SCO UnixWare 7. src/configure src/configure.in The configure script was modified to recognize SCO UnixWare 7. Billy G. Allie
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