32984 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Heikki Linnakangas
e1d1d80993 Fix thinko in comment.
WAL segment means a 16 MB physical WAL file; this comment meant a logical
4 GB log file.

Amit Langote. Apply to backbranches only, as the comment is gone in master.
2013-05-02 18:11:28 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas
424cc31a37 Install recycled WAL segments with current timeline ID during recovery.
This is a follow-up to the earlier fix, which changed the recycling logic
to recycle WAL segments under the current recovery target timeline. That
turns out to be a bad idea, because installing a recycled segment with
a TLI higher than what we're recovering at the moment means that the recovery
logic will find the recycled WAL segment and try to replay it. It will fail,
but but the mere presence of such a WAL segment will mask any other, real,
file with the same log/seg, but smaller TLI.

Per report from Mitsumasa Kondo. Apply to 9.1 and 9.2, like the previous
fix. Master was already doing this differently; this patch makes 9.1 and
9.2 to do the same thing as master.
2013-04-30 17:50:10 +03:00
Kevin Grittner
93641341f0 Ensure ANALYZE phase is not skipped because of canceled truncate.
Patch b19e4250b45e91c9cbdd18d35ea6391ab5961c8d attempted to
preserve existing behavior regarding statistics generation in the
case that a truncation attempt was canceled due to lock conflicts.
It failed to do this accurately in two regards: (1) autovacuum had
previously generated statistics if the truncate attempt failed to
initially get the lock rather than having started the attempt, and
(2) the VACUUM ANALYZE command had always generated statistics.

Both of these changes were unintended, and are reverted by this
patch.  On review, there seems to be consensus that the previous
failure to generate statistics when the truncate was terminated
was more an unfortunate consequence of how that effort was
previously terminated than a feature we want to keep; so this
patch generates statistics even when an autovacuum truncation
attempt terminates early.  Another unintended change which is kept
on the basis that it is an improvement is that when a VACUUM
command is truncating, it will the new heuristic for avoiding
blocking other processes, rather than keeping an
AccessExclusiveLock on the table for however long the truncation
takes.

Per multiple reports, with some renaming per patch by Jeff Janes.

Backpatch to 9.0, where problem was created.
2013-04-29 13:06:28 -05:00
Joe Conway
359c8e4545 Ensure that user created rows in extension tables get dumped if the table is explicitly requested, either with a -t/--table switch of the table itself, or by -n/--schema switch of the schema containing the extension table. Patch reviewed by Vibhor Kumar and Dimitri Fontaine.
Backpatched to 9.1 when the extension management facility was added.
2013-04-26 12:03:11 -07:00
Tom Lane
32ad1d696a Avoid deadlock between concurrent CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY commands.
There was a high probability of two or more concurrent C.I.C. commands
deadlocking just before completion, because each would wait for the others
to release their reference snapshots.  Fix by releasing the snapshot
before waiting for other snapshots to go away.

Per report from Paul Hinze.  Back-patch to all active branches.
2013-04-25 16:58:14 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
ae76795214 Fix typo in comment.
Peter Geoghegan
2013-04-25 14:07:55 +03:00
Tom Lane
c13ed70a4f Fix longstanding race condition in plancache.c.
When creating or manipulating a cached plan for a transaction control
command (particularly ROLLBACK), we must not perform any catalog accesses,
since we might be in an aborted transaction.  However, plancache.c busily
saved or examined the search_path for every cached plan.  If we were
unlucky enough to do this at a moment where the path's expansion into
schema OIDs wasn't already cached, we'd do some catalog accesses; and with
some more bad luck such as an ill-timed signal arrival, that could lead to
crashes or Assert failures, as exhibited in bug #8095 from Nachiket Vaidya.
Fortunately, there's no real need to consider the search path for such
commands, so we can just skip the relevant steps when the subject statement
is a TransactionStmt.  This is somewhat related to bug #5269, though the
failure happens during initial cached-plan creation rather than
revalidation.

This bug has been there since the plan cache was invented, so back-patch
to all supported branches.
2013-04-20 16:59:31 -04:00
Tom Lane
d189deebd3 Improve documentation about the relationship of extensions and schemas.
There's been some confusion expressed about this point, so clarify.
Extended version of a patch by David Wheeler.
2013-04-04 22:37:32 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
7ef110757e doc: Fix number of columns in table 2013-04-04 21:14:21 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
88b000c1b6 Fix crash on compiling a regular expression with more than 32k colors.
Throw an error instead.

Backpatch to all supported branches.
2013-04-04 19:32:05 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas
6ce083f08a Calculate # of semaphores correctly with --disable-spinlocks.
The old formula didn't take into account that each WAL sender process needs
a spinlock. We had also already exceeded the fixed number of spinlocks
reserved for misc purposes (10). Bump that to 30.

Backpatch to 9.0, where WAL senders were introduced. If I counted correctly,
9.0 had exactly 10 predefined spinlocks, and 9.1 exceeded that, but bump the
limit in 9.0 too because 10 is uncomfortably close to the edge.
2013-04-04 16:38:21 +03:00
Tom Lane
677fde06af Minor robustness improvements for isolationtester.
Notice and complain about PQcancel() failures.  Also, don't dump core if
an error PGresult doesn't contain severity and message subfields, as it
might not if it was generated by libpq itself.  (We have a longstanding
TODO item to improve that, but in the meantime isolationtester had better
cope.)

I tripped across the latter item while investigating a trouble report on
buildfarm member spoonbill.  As for the former, there's no evidence that
PQcancel failure is actually involved in spoonbill's problem, but it still
seems like a bad idea to ignore an error return code.
2013-04-02 21:15:50 -04:00
Tom Lane
114fca526e Stamp 9.1.9. REL9_1_9 2013-04-01 14:23:05 -04:00
Tom Lane
5e3d2123a0 Update release notes for 9.2.4, 9.1.9, 9.0.13, 8.4.17.
Security: CVE-2013-1899, CVE-2013-1901
2013-04-01 14:11:21 -04:00
Tom Lane
ddf177228f Fix insecure parsing of server command-line switches.
An oversight in commit e710b65c1c56ca7b91f662c63d37ff2e72862a94 allowed
database names beginning with "-" to be treated as though they were secure
command-line switches; and this switch processing occurs before client
authentication, so that even an unprivileged remote attacker could exploit
the bug, needing only connectivity to the postmaster's port.  Assorted
exploits for this are possible, some requiring a valid database login,
some not.  The worst known problem is that the "-r" switch can be invoked
to redirect the process's stderr output, so that subsequent error messages
will be appended to any file the server can write.  This can for example be
used to corrupt the server's configuration files, so that it will fail when
next restarted.  Complete destruction of database tables is also possible.

Fix by keeping the database name extracted from a startup packet fully
separate from command-line switches, as had already been done with the
user name field.

The Postgres project thanks Mitsumasa Kondo for discovering this bug,
Kyotaro Horiguchi for drafting the fix, and Noah Misch for recognizing
the full extent of the danger.

Security: CVE-2013-1899
2013-04-01 14:01:04 -04:00
Tom Lane
b403f4107b Make REPLICATION privilege checks test current user not authenticated user.
The pg_start_backup() and pg_stop_backup() functions checked the privileges
of the initially-authenticated user rather than the current user, which is
wrong.  For example, a user-defined index function could successfully call
these functions when executed by ANALYZE within autovacuum.  This could
allow an attacker with valid but low-privilege database access to interfere
with creation of routine backups.  Reported and fixed by Noah Misch.

Security: CVE-2013-1901
2013-04-01 13:09:35 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
54d4a8f023 Translation updates 2013-03-31 23:40:34 -04:00
Tom Lane
ad480bd253 Ignore extra subquery outputs in set_subquery_size_estimates().
In commit 0f61d4dd1b4f95832dcd81c9688dac56fd6b5687, I added code to copy up
column width estimates for each column of a subquery.  That code supposed
that the subquery couldn't have any output columns that didn't correspond
to known columns of the current query level --- which is true when a query
is parsed from scratch, but the assumption fails when planning a view that
depends on another view that's been redefined (adding output columns) since
the upper view was made.  This results in an assertion failure or even a
crash, as per bug #8025 from lindebg.  Remove the Assert and instead skip
the column if its resno is out of the expected range.
2013-03-31 18:34:44 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
861aac5870 Translation updates 2013-03-31 16:41:13 -03:00
Bruce Momjian
ce4f365188 pg_upgrade: don't copy/link files for invalid indexes
Now that pg_dump no longer dumps invalid indexes, per commit
683abc73dff549e94555d4020dae8d02f32ed78b, have pg_upgrade also skip
them.  Previously pg_upgrade threw an error if invalid indexes existed.

Backpatch to 9.2, 9.1, and 9.0 (where pg_upgrade was added to git)
2013-03-30 22:20:53 -04:00
Tom Lane
7bc2e68c60 Document encode(bytea, 'escape')'s behavior correctly.
I changed this in commit fd15dba543247eb1ce879d22632b9fdb4c230831, but
missed the fact that the SGML documentation of the function specified
exactly what it did.  Well, one of the two places where it's specified
documented that --- probably I looked at the other place and thought
nothing needed to be done.  Sync the two places where encode() and
decode() are described.
2013-03-28 23:15:02 -04:00
Tom Lane
721478d868 Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2013b.
DST law changes in Chile, Haiti, Morocco, Paraguay, some Russian areas.
Historical corrections for numerous places.
2013-03-28 15:25:58 -04:00
Tom Lane
915d8230cb Reset OpenSSL randomness state in each postmaster child process.
Previously, if the postmaster initialized OpenSSL's PRNG (which it will do
when ssl=on in postgresql.conf), the same pseudo-random state would be
inherited by each forked child process.  The problem is masked to a
considerable extent if the incoming connection uses SSL encryption, but
when it does not, identical pseudo-random state is made available to
functions like contrib/pgcrypto.  The process's PID does get mixed into any
requested random output, but on most systems that still only results in 32K
or so distinct random sequences available across all Postgres sessions.
This might allow an attacker who has database access to guess the results
of "secure" operations happening in another session.

To fix, forcibly reset the PRNG after fork().  Each child process that has
need for random numbers from OpenSSL's generator will thereby be forced to
go through OpenSSL's normal initialization sequence, which should provide
much greater variability of the sequences.  There are other ways we might
do this that would be slightly cheaper, but this approach seems the most
future-proof against SSL-related code changes.

This has been assigned CVE-2013-1900, but since the issue and the patch
have already been publicized on pgsql-hackers, there's no point in trying
to hide this commit.

Back-patch to all supported branches.

Marko Kreen
2013-03-27 18:50:29 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
f4ecfbcaf0 Fix buffer pin leak in heap update redo routine.
In a heap update, if the old and new tuple were on different pages, and the
new page no longer existed (because it was subsequently truncated away by
vacuum), heap_xlog_update forgot to release the pin on the old buffer. This
bug was introduced by the "Fix multiple problems in WAL replay" patch,
commit 3bbf668de9f1bc172371681e80a4e769b6d014c8 (on master branch).

With full_page_writes=off, this triggered an "incorrect local pin count"
error later in replay, if the old page was vacuumed.

This fixes bug #7969, reported by Yunong Xiao. Backpatch to 9.0, like the
commit that introduced this bug.
2013-03-27 22:05:29 +02:00
Tom Lane
30de42d254 Ignore invalid indexes in pg_dump.
Dumping invalid indexes can cause problems at restore time, for example
if the reason the index creation failed was because it tried to enforce
a uniqueness condition not satisfied by the table's data.  Also, if the
index creation is in fact still in progress, it seems reasonable to
consider it to be an uncommitted DDL change, which pg_dump wouldn't be
expected to dump anyway.

Back-patch to all active versions, and teach them to ignore invalid
indexes in servers back to 8.2, where the concept was introduced.

Michael Paquier
2013-03-26 17:43:26 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
2e4acef357 In base backup, only include our own tablespace version directory.
If you have clusters of different versions pointing to the same tablespace
location, we would incorrectly include all the data belonging to the other
versions, too.

Fixes bug #7986, reported by Sergey Burladyan.
2013-03-25 20:26:30 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas
aa5d7d58ba Add a server version check to pg_basebackup and pg_receivexlog.
These programs don't work against 9.0 or earlier servers, so check that when
the connection is made. That's better than a cryptic error message you got
before.

Also, these programs won't work with a 9.3 server, because the WAL streaming
protocol was changed in a non-backwards-compatible way. As a general rule,
we don't make any guarantee that an old client will work with a new server,
so check that. However, allow a 9.1 client to connect to a 9.2 server, to
avoid breaking environments that currently work; a 9.1 client happens to
work with a 9.2 server, even though we didn't make any great effort to
ensure that.

This patch is for the 9.1 and 9.2 branches, I'll commit a similar patch to
master later. Although this isn't a critical bug fix, it seems safe enough
to back-patch. The error message you got when connecting to a 9.3devel
server without this patch was cryptic enough to warrant backpatching.
2013-03-25 11:03:20 +02:00
Tom Lane
f1bd8a82d7 Update time zone abbreviation lists for changes missed since 2006.
Most (all?) of Russia has moved to what's effectively year-round daylight
savings time, so that the "standard" zone names now mean an hour later
than they used to.  Update that, notably changing MSK as per recent
complaint from Sergey Konoplev, but also CHOT, GET, IRKT, KGT, KRAT,
MAGT, NOVT, OMST, VLAT, YAKT, YEKT.  The corresponding DST abbreviations
are presumably now obsolete, but I left them in place with their old
definitions, just to reduce any possible breakage from this change.

Also add VOLT (Europe/Volgograd), which for some reason we never had
before, as well as MIST (Antarctica/Macquarie), and fix obsolete
definitions of MAWT, TKT, and WST.
2013-03-23 19:16:46 -04:00
Tom Lane
7a9670b044 Don't put <indexterm> before <term> in <varlistentry> items.
Doing that results in a broken index entry in PDF output.  We had only
a few like that, which is probably why nobody noticed before.
Standardize on putting the <term> first.

Josh Kupershmidt
2013-03-23 14:06:40 -04:00
Tom Lane
4400976281 Improve documentation of EXTRACT(WEEK).
The docs showed that early-January dates can be considered part of the
previous year for week-counting purposes, but failed to say explicitly
that late-December dates can also be considered part of the next year.
Fix that, and add a cross-reference to the "isoyear" field.  Per bug
#7967 from Pawel Kobylak.
2013-03-18 13:34:27 -04:00
Tom Lane
cce7486127 Fix race condition in DELETE RETURNING.
When RETURNING is specified, ExecDelete would return a virtual-tuple slot
that could contain pointers into an already-unpinned disk buffer.  Another
process could change the buffer contents before we get around to using the
data, resulting in garbage results or even a crash.  This seems of fairly
low probability, which may explain why there are no known field reports of
the problem, but it's definitely possible.  Fix by forcing the result slot
to be "materialized" before we release pin on the disk buffer.

Back-patch to 9.0; in earlier branches there is no bug because
ExecProcessReturning sent the tuple to the destination immediately.  Also,
this is already fixed in HEAD as part of the writable-foreign-tables patch
(where the fix is necessary for DELETE RETURNING to work at all with
postgres_fdw).
2013-03-10 19:18:49 -04:00
Tom Lane
ef2a82bebd Fix infinite-loop risk in fixempties() stage of regex compilation.
The previous coding of this function could get into situations where it
would never terminate, because successive passes would re-add EMPTY arcs
that had been removed by the previous pass.  Rewrite the function
completely using a new algorithm that is guaranteed to terminate, and
also seems to be usually faster than the old one.  Per Tcl bugs 3604074
and 3606683.

Tom Lane and Don Porter
2013-03-07 11:51:13 -05:00
Tom Lane
81e2255fc7 Fix to_char() to use ASCII-only case-folding rules where appropriate.
formatting.c used locale-dependent case folding rules in some code paths
where the result isn't supposed to be locale-dependent, for example
to_char(timestamp, 'DAY').  Since the source data is always just ASCII
in these cases, that usually didn't matter ... but it does matter in
Turkish locales, which have unusual treatment of "i" and "I".  To confuse
matters even more, the misbehavior was only visible in UTF8 encoding,
because in single-byte encodings we used pg_toupper/pg_tolower which
don't have locale-specific behavior for ASCII characters.  Fix by providing
intentionally ASCII-only case-folding functions and using these where
appropriate.  Per bug #7913 from Adnan Dursun.  Back-patch to all active
branches, since it's been like this for a long time.
2013-03-05 13:02:38 -05:00
Tom Lane
3a77936602 Fix overflow check in tm2timestamp (this time for sure).
I fixed this code back in commit 841b4a2d5, but didn't think carefully
enough about the behavior near zero, which meant it improperly rejected
1999-12-31 24:00:00.  Per report from Magnus Hagander.
2013-03-04 15:14:00 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
c0d35067a5 doc: Awkward phrasing fix
Josh Kupershmidt
2013-03-03 08:52:34 -05:00
Tom Lane
b2da7c805c Eliminate memory leaks in plperl's spi_prepare() function.
Careless use of TopMemoryContext for I/O function data meant that repeated
use of spi_prepare and spi_freeplan would leak memory at the session level,
as per report from Christian Schröder.  In addition, spi_prepare
leaked a lot of transient data within the current plperl function's SPI
Proc context, which would be a problem for repeated use of spi_prepare
within a single plperl function call; and it wasn't terribly careful
about releasing permanent allocations in event of an error, either.

In passing, clean up some copy-and-pasteos in query-lookup error messages.

Alex Hunsaker and Tom Lane
2013-03-01 21:34:32 -05:00
Tom Lane
f5185db27f Add missing error check in regexp parser.
parseqatom() failed to check for an error return (NULL result) from its
recursive call to parsebranch(), and in consequence could crash with a
null-pointer dereference after an error return.  This bug has been there
since day one, but wasn't noticed before, probably because most error cases
in parsebranch() didn't actually lead to returning NULL.  Add the missing
error check, and also tweak parsebranch() to exit in a less indirect
fashion after a call to parseqatom() fails.

Report by Tomasz Karlik, fix by me.
2013-02-27 10:40:14 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
bd0bfe1f80 doc: Fix markup typo 2013-02-25 18:00:03 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
e4e35491fc doc: Remove PostgreSQL version number from xml2 deprecation notice
It is obviously no longer true.
2013-02-24 15:40:16 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
e779194708 Correct tense in log message 2013-02-23 23:33:18 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas
957bafb209 Fix pg_dumpall with database names containing =
If a database name contained a '=' character, pg_dumpall failed. The problem
was in the way pg_dumpall passes the database name to pg_dump on the
command line. If it contained a '=' character, pg_dump would interpret it
as a libpq connection string instead of a plain database name.

To fix, pass the database name to pg_dump as a connection string,
"dbname=foo", with the database name escaped if necessary.

Back-patch to all supported branches.
2013-02-20 17:12:27 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas
23ef96327f Don't pass NULL to fprintf, if a bogus connection string is given to pg_dump.
Back-patch to all supported branches.
2013-02-20 16:34:29 +02:00
Tom Lane
f73a16340c Fix contrib/pg_trgm's similarity() function for trigram-free strings.
Cases such as similarity('', '') produced a NaN result due to computing
0/0.  Per discussion, make it return zero instead.

This appears to be the basic cause of bug #7867 from Michele Baravalle,
although it remains unclear why her installation doesn't think Cyrillic
letters are letters.

Back-patch to all active branches.
2013-02-13 14:07:17 -05:00
Tom Lane
52c889ea4f Fix bogus when-to-deregister-from-listener-array logic.
Since a backend adds itself to the global listener array during
Exec_ListenPreCommit, it's inappropriate for it to remove itself during
Exec_UnlistenCommit or Exec_UnlistenAllCommit --- that leads to failure
when committing a transaction that did UNLISTEN then LISTEN, since we end
up not registered though we should be.  (This leads to missing later
notifications, or to Assert failures in assert-enabled builds.)  Instead
deal with deregistering at the bottom of AtCommit_Notify, when we know the
final state of the listenChannels list.

Also, simplify the representation of registration status by replacing the
transient backendHasExecutedInitialListen flag with an amRegisteredListener
flag.

Per report from Greg Sabino Mullane.  Back-patch to 9.0, where the problem
was introduced during the LISTEN/NOTIFY rewrite.
2013-02-13 12:48:15 -05:00
Tom Lane
bffee6c52c Further cleanup of gistsplit.c.
After further reflection I was unconvinced that the existing coding is
guaranteed to return valid union datums in every code path for multi-column
indexes.  Fix that by forcing a gistunionsubkey() call at the end of the
recursion.  Having done that, we can remove some clearly-redundant calls
elsewhere.  This should be a little faster for multi-column indexes (since
the previous coding would uselessly do such a call for each column while
unwinding the recursion), as well as much harder to break.

Also, simplify the handling of cases where one side or the other of a
primary split contains only don't-care tuples.  The previous coding used a
very ugly hack in removeDontCares() that essentially forced one random
tuple to be treated as non-don't-care, providing a random initial choice of
seed datum for the secondary split.  It seems unlikely that that method
will give better-than-random splits.  Instead, treat such a split as
degenerate and just let the next column determine the split, the same way
that we handle fully degenerate cases where the two sides produce identical
union datums.
2013-02-10 16:21:37 -05:00
Tom Lane
0ddfa3b64a Remove useless picksplit-doesn't-support-secondary-split log spam.
This LOG message was put in over five years ago with the evident
expectation that we'd make all GiST opclasses support secondary split
directly.  However, no such thing ever happened, and indeed the number of
opclasses supporting it decreased to zero in 9.2.  The reason is that
improving on the default implementation isn't that easy --- the
opclass-specific code that did exist, before 9.2, doesn't appear to have
been any improvement over the default.

Hence, remove the message altogether.  There's certainly no point in
nagging users about this in released branches, but I doubt that we'll
ever implement complete opclass-specific support anyway.
2013-02-10 13:07:50 -05:00
Tom Lane
a0698406f4 Document and clean up gistsplit.c.
Improve comments, rename some variables and functions, slightly simplify
a couple of APIs, in an attempt to make this code readable by people other
than its original author.

Even though this is essentially just cosmetic, back-patch to all active
branches, because otherwise it's going to make back-patching future fixes
in this file very painful.
2013-02-10 11:58:28 -05:00
Tom Lane
4d4c00850d Fix gist_box_same and gist_point_consistent to handle fuzziness correctly.
While there's considerable doubt that we want fuzzy behavior in the
geometric operators at all (let alone as currently implemented), nobody is
stepping forward to redesign that stuff.  In the meantime it behooves us
to make sure that index searches agree with the behavior of the underlying
operators.  This patch fixes two problems in this area.

First, gist_box_same was using fuzzy equality, but it really needs to use
exact equality to prevent not-quite-identical upper index keys from being
treated as identical, which for example would prevent an existing upper
key from being extended by an amount less than epsilon.  This would result
in inconsistent indexes.  (The next release notes will need to recommend
that users reindex GiST indexes on boxes, polygons, circles, and points,
since all four opclasses use gist_box_same.)

Second, gist_point_consistent used exact comparisons for upper-page
comparisons in ~= searches, when it needs to use fuzzy comparisons to
ensure it finds all matches; and it used fuzzy comparisons for point <@ box
searches, when it needs to use exact comparisons because that's what the
<@ operator (rather inconsistently) does.

The added regression test cases illustrate all three misbehaviors.

Back-patch to all active branches.  (8.4 did not have GiST point_ops,
but it still seems prudent to apply the gist_box_same patch to it.)

Alexander Korotkov, reviewed by Noah Misch
2013-02-08 18:03:28 -05:00
Tom Lane
cd3dfb02d8 Make contrib/btree_gist's GiST penalty function a bit saner.
The previous coding supposed that the first differing bytes in two varlena
datums must have the same sign difference as their overall comparison
result.  This is obviously bogus for text strings in non-C locales, and
probably wrong for numeric, and even for bytea I think it was wrong on
machines where char is signed.  When the assumption failed, the function
could deliver a zero or negative penalty in situations where such a result
is quite ridiculous, leading the core GiST code to make very bad page-split
decisions.

To fix, take the absolute values of the byte-level differences.  Also,
switch the code to using unsigned char not just char, so that the behavior
will be consistent whether char is signed or not.

Per investigation of a trouble report from Tomas Vondra.  Back-patch to all
supported branches.
2013-02-07 19:14:13 -05:00
Tom Lane
500889a9d2 Fix erroneous range-union logic for varlena types in contrib/btree_gist.
gbt_var_bin_union() failed to do the right thing when the existing range
needed to be widened at both ends rather than just one end.  This could
result in an invalid index in which keys that are present would not be
found by searches, because the searches would not think they need to
descend to the relevant leaf pages.  This error affected all the varlena
datatypes supported by btree_gist (text, bytea, bit, numeric).

Per investigation of a trouble report from Tomas Vondra.  (There is also
an issue in gbt_var_penalty(), but that should only result in inefficiency
not wrong answers.  I'm committing this separately so that we have a git
state in which it can be tested that bad penalty results don't produce
invalid indexes.)  Back-patch to all supported branches.
2013-02-07 18:22:32 -05:00