Tom Lane ca4af308c3 Simplify handling of the timezone GUC by making initdb choose the default.
We were doing some amazingly complicated things in order to avoid running
the very expensive identify_system_timezone() procedure during GUC
initialization.  But there is an obvious fix for that, which is to do it
once during initdb and have initdb install the system-specific default into
postgresql.conf, as it already does for most other GUC variables that need
system-environment-dependent defaults.  This means that the timezone (and
log_timezone) settings no longer have any magic behavior in the server.
Per discussion.
2011-09-09 17:59:11 -04:00

974 lines
23 KiB
C

/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* variable.c
* Routines for handling specialized SET variables.
*
*
* Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2011, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
* Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
*
*
* IDENTIFICATION
* src/backend/commands/variable.c
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#include "postgres.h"
#include <ctype.h>
#include "access/xact.h"
#include "catalog/pg_authid.h"
#include "commands/variable.h"
#include "miscadmin.h"
#include "utils/acl.h"
#include "utils/builtins.h"
#include "utils/syscache.h"
#include "utils/snapmgr.h"
#include "utils/timestamp.h"
#include "mb/pg_wchar.h"
/*
* DATESTYLE
*/
/*
* check_datestyle: GUC check_hook for datestyle
*/
bool
check_datestyle(char **newval, void **extra, GucSource source)
{
int newDateStyle = DateStyle;
int newDateOrder = DateOrder;
bool have_style = false;
bool have_order = false;
bool ok = true;
char *rawstring;
int *myextra;
char *result;
List *elemlist;
ListCell *l;
/* Need a modifiable copy of string */
rawstring = pstrdup(*newval);
/* Parse string into list of identifiers */
if (!SplitIdentifierString(rawstring, ',', &elemlist))
{
/* syntax error in list */
GUC_check_errdetail("List syntax is invalid.");
pfree(rawstring);
list_free(elemlist);
return false;
}
foreach(l, elemlist)
{
char *tok = (char *) lfirst(l);
/* Ugh. Somebody ought to write a table driven version -- mjl */
if (pg_strcasecmp(tok, "ISO") == 0)
{
if (have_style && newDateStyle != USE_ISO_DATES)
ok = false; /* conflicting styles */
newDateStyle = USE_ISO_DATES;
have_style = true;
}
else if (pg_strcasecmp(tok, "SQL") == 0)
{
if (have_style && newDateStyle != USE_SQL_DATES)
ok = false; /* conflicting styles */
newDateStyle = USE_SQL_DATES;
have_style = true;
}
else if (pg_strncasecmp(tok, "POSTGRES", 8) == 0)
{
if (have_style && newDateStyle != USE_POSTGRES_DATES)
ok = false; /* conflicting styles */
newDateStyle = USE_POSTGRES_DATES;
have_style = true;
}
else if (pg_strcasecmp(tok, "GERMAN") == 0)
{
if (have_style && newDateStyle != USE_GERMAN_DATES)
ok = false; /* conflicting styles */
newDateStyle = USE_GERMAN_DATES;
have_style = true;
/* GERMAN also sets DMY, unless explicitly overridden */
if (!have_order)
newDateOrder = DATEORDER_DMY;
}
else if (pg_strcasecmp(tok, "YMD") == 0)
{
if (have_order && newDateOrder != DATEORDER_YMD)
ok = false; /* conflicting orders */
newDateOrder = DATEORDER_YMD;
have_order = true;
}
else if (pg_strcasecmp(tok, "DMY") == 0 ||
pg_strncasecmp(tok, "EURO", 4) == 0)
{
if (have_order && newDateOrder != DATEORDER_DMY)
ok = false; /* conflicting orders */
newDateOrder = DATEORDER_DMY;
have_order = true;
}
else if (pg_strcasecmp(tok, "MDY") == 0 ||
pg_strcasecmp(tok, "US") == 0 ||
pg_strncasecmp(tok, "NONEURO", 7) == 0)
{
if (have_order && newDateOrder != DATEORDER_MDY)
ok = false; /* conflicting orders */
newDateOrder = DATEORDER_MDY;
have_order = true;
}
else if (pg_strcasecmp(tok, "DEFAULT") == 0)
{
/*
* Easiest way to get the current DEFAULT state is to fetch the
* DEFAULT string from guc.c and recursively parse it.
*
* We can't simply "return check_datestyle(...)" because we need
* to handle constructs like "DEFAULT, ISO".
*/
char *subval;
void *subextra = NULL;
subval = strdup(GetConfigOptionResetString("datestyle"));
if (!subval)
{
ok = false;
break;
}
if (!check_datestyle(&subval, &subextra, source))
{
free(subval);
ok = false;
break;
}
myextra = (int *) subextra;
if (!have_style)
newDateStyle = myextra[0];
if (!have_order)
newDateOrder = myextra[1];
free(subval);
free(subextra);
}
else
{
GUC_check_errdetail("Unrecognized key word: \"%s\".", tok);
pfree(rawstring);
list_free(elemlist);
return false;
}
}
pfree(rawstring);
list_free(elemlist);
if (!ok)
{
GUC_check_errdetail("Conflicting \"datestyle\" specifications.");
return false;
}
/*
* Prepare the canonical string to return. GUC wants it malloc'd.
*/
result = (char *) malloc(32);
if (!result)
return false;
switch (newDateStyle)
{
case USE_ISO_DATES:
strcpy(result, "ISO");
break;
case USE_SQL_DATES:
strcpy(result, "SQL");
break;
case USE_GERMAN_DATES:
strcpy(result, "German");
break;
default:
strcpy(result, "Postgres");
break;
}
switch (newDateOrder)
{
case DATEORDER_YMD:
strcat(result, ", YMD");
break;
case DATEORDER_DMY:
strcat(result, ", DMY");
break;
default:
strcat(result, ", MDY");
break;
}
free(*newval);
*newval = result;
/*
* Set up the "extra" struct actually used by assign_datestyle.
*/
myextra = (int *) malloc(2 * sizeof(int));
if (!myextra)
return false;
myextra[0] = newDateStyle;
myextra[1] = newDateOrder;
*extra = (void *) myextra;
return true;
}
/*
* assign_datestyle: GUC assign_hook for datestyle
*/
void
assign_datestyle(const char *newval, void *extra)
{
int *myextra = (int *) extra;
DateStyle = myextra[0];
DateOrder = myextra[1];
}
/*
* TIMEZONE
*/
typedef struct
{
pg_tz *session_timezone;
int CTimeZone;
bool HasCTZSet;
} timezone_extra;
/*
* check_timezone: GUC check_hook for timezone
*/
bool
check_timezone(char **newval, void **extra, GucSource source)
{
timezone_extra myextra;
char *endptr;
double hours;
/*
* Initialize the "extra" struct that will be passed to assign_timezone.
* We don't want to change any of the three global variables except as
* specified by logic below. To avoid leaking memory during failure
* returns, we set up the struct contents in a local variable, and only
* copy it to *extra at the end.
*/
myextra.session_timezone = session_timezone;
myextra.CTimeZone = CTimeZone;
myextra.HasCTZSet = HasCTZSet;
if (pg_strncasecmp(*newval, "interval", 8) == 0)
{
/*
* Support INTERVAL 'foo'. This is for SQL spec compliance, not
* because it has any actual real-world usefulness.
*/
const char *valueptr = *newval;
char *val;
Interval *interval;
valueptr += 8;
while (isspace((unsigned char) *valueptr))
valueptr++;
if (*valueptr++ != '\'')
return false;
val = pstrdup(valueptr);
/* Check and remove trailing quote */
endptr = strchr(val, '\'');
if (!endptr || endptr[1] != '\0')
{
pfree(val);
return false;
}
*endptr = '\0';
/*
* Try to parse it. XXX an invalid interval format will result in
* ereport(ERROR), which is not desirable for GUC. We did what we
* could to guard against this in flatten_set_variable_args, but a
* string coming in from postgresql.conf might contain anything.
*/
interval = DatumGetIntervalP(DirectFunctionCall3(interval_in,
CStringGetDatum(val),
ObjectIdGetDatum(InvalidOid),
Int32GetDatum(-1)));
pfree(val);
if (interval->month != 0)
{
GUC_check_errdetail("Cannot specify months in time zone interval.");
pfree(interval);
return false;
}
if (interval->day != 0)
{
GUC_check_errdetail("Cannot specify days in time zone interval.");
pfree(interval);
return false;
}
/* Here we change from SQL to Unix sign convention */
#ifdef HAVE_INT64_TIMESTAMP
myextra.CTimeZone = -(interval->time / USECS_PER_SEC);
#else
myextra.CTimeZone = -interval->time;
#endif
myextra.HasCTZSet = true;
pfree(interval);
}
else
{
/*
* Try it as a numeric number of hours (possibly fractional).
*/
hours = strtod(*newval, &endptr);
if (endptr != *newval && *endptr == '\0')
{
/* Here we change from SQL to Unix sign convention */
myextra.CTimeZone = -hours * SECS_PER_HOUR;
myextra.HasCTZSet = true;
}
else
{
/*
* Otherwise assume it is a timezone name, and try to load it.
*/
pg_tz *new_tz;
new_tz = pg_tzset(*newval);
if (!new_tz)
{
/* Doesn't seem to be any great value in errdetail here */
return false;
}
if (!pg_tz_acceptable(new_tz))
{
GUC_check_errmsg("time zone \"%s\" appears to use leap seconds",
*newval);
GUC_check_errdetail("PostgreSQL does not support leap seconds.");
return false;
}
myextra.session_timezone = new_tz;
myextra.HasCTZSet = false;
}
}
/*
* Prepare the canonical string to return. GUC wants it malloc'd.
*
* Note: the result string should be something that we'd accept as input.
* We use the numeric format for interval cases, because it's simpler to
* reload. In the named-timezone case, *newval is already OK and need not
* be changed; it might not have the canonical casing, but that's taken
* care of by show_timezone.
*/
if (myextra.HasCTZSet)
{
char *result = (char *) malloc(64);
if (!result)
return false;
snprintf(result, 64, "%.5f",
(double) (-myextra.CTimeZone) / (double) SECS_PER_HOUR);
free(*newval);
*newval = result;
}
/*
* Pass back data for assign_timezone to use
*/
*extra = malloc(sizeof(timezone_extra));
if (!*extra)
return false;
memcpy(*extra, &myextra, sizeof(timezone_extra));
return true;
}
/*
* assign_timezone: GUC assign_hook for timezone
*/
void
assign_timezone(const char *newval, void *extra)
{
timezone_extra *myextra = (timezone_extra *) extra;
session_timezone = myextra->session_timezone;
CTimeZone = myextra->CTimeZone;
HasCTZSet = myextra->HasCTZSet;
}
/*
* show_timezone: GUC show_hook for timezone
*
* We wouldn't need this, except that historically interval values have been
* shown without an INTERVAL prefix, so the display format isn't what would
* be accepted as input. Otherwise we could have check_timezone return the
* preferred string to begin with.
*/
const char *
show_timezone(void)
{
const char *tzn;
if (HasCTZSet)
{
Interval interval;
interval.month = 0;
interval.day = 0;
#ifdef HAVE_INT64_TIMESTAMP
interval.time = -(CTimeZone * USECS_PER_SEC);
#else
interval.time = -CTimeZone;
#endif
tzn = DatumGetCString(DirectFunctionCall1(interval_out,
IntervalPGetDatum(&interval)));
}
else
tzn = pg_get_timezone_name(session_timezone);
if (tzn != NULL)
return tzn;
return "unknown";
}
/*
* LOG_TIMEZONE
*
* For log_timezone, we don't support the interval-based methods of setting a
* zone, which are only there for SQL spec compliance not because they're
* actually useful.
*/
/*
* check_log_timezone: GUC check_hook for log_timezone
*/
bool
check_log_timezone(char **newval, void **extra, GucSource source)
{
pg_tz *new_tz;
/*
* Assume it is a timezone name, and try to load it.
*/
new_tz = pg_tzset(*newval);
if (!new_tz)
{
/* Doesn't seem to be any great value in errdetail here */
return false;
}
if (!pg_tz_acceptable(new_tz))
{
GUC_check_errmsg("time zone \"%s\" appears to use leap seconds",
*newval);
GUC_check_errdetail("PostgreSQL does not support leap seconds.");
return false;
}
/*
* Pass back data for assign_log_timezone to use
*/
*extra = malloc(sizeof(pg_tz *));
if (!*extra)
return false;
memcpy(*extra, &new_tz, sizeof(pg_tz *));
return true;
}
/*
* assign_log_timezone: GUC assign_hook for log_timezone
*/
void
assign_log_timezone(const char *newval, void *extra)
{
log_timezone = *((pg_tz **) extra);
}
/*
* show_log_timezone: GUC show_hook for log_timezone
*/
const char *
show_log_timezone(void)
{
const char *tzn;
tzn = pg_get_timezone_name(log_timezone);
if (tzn != NULL)
return tzn;
return "unknown";
}
/*
* SET TRANSACTION READ ONLY and SET TRANSACTION READ WRITE
*
* We allow idempotent changes (r/w -> r/w and r/o -> r/o) at any time, and
* we also always allow changes from read-write to read-only. However,
* read-only may be changed to read-write only when in a top-level transaction
* that has not yet taken an initial snapshot. Can't do it in a hot standby
* slave, either.
*/
bool
check_transaction_read_only(bool *newval, void **extra, GucSource source)
{
if (*newval == false && XactReadOnly)
{
/* Can't go to r/w mode inside a r/o transaction */
if (IsSubTransaction())
{
GUC_check_errcode(ERRCODE_ACTIVE_SQL_TRANSACTION);
GUC_check_errmsg("cannot set transaction read-write mode inside a read-only transaction");
return false;
}
/* Top level transaction can't change to r/w after first snapshot. */
if (FirstSnapshotSet)
{
GUC_check_errcode(ERRCODE_ACTIVE_SQL_TRANSACTION);
GUC_check_errmsg("transaction read-write mode must be set before any query");
return false;
}
/* Can't go to r/w mode while recovery is still active */
if (RecoveryInProgress())
{
GUC_check_errmsg("cannot set transaction read-write mode during recovery");
return false;
}
}
return true;
}
/*
* SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL
*
* We allow idempotent changes at any time, but otherwise this can only be
* changed in a toplevel transaction that has not yet taken a snapshot.
*/
bool
check_XactIsoLevel(char **newval, void **extra, GucSource source)
{
int newXactIsoLevel;
if (strcmp(*newval, "serializable") == 0)
{
newXactIsoLevel = XACT_SERIALIZABLE;
}
else if (strcmp(*newval, "repeatable read") == 0)
{
newXactIsoLevel = XACT_REPEATABLE_READ;
}
else if (strcmp(*newval, "read committed") == 0)
{
newXactIsoLevel = XACT_READ_COMMITTED;
}
else if (strcmp(*newval, "read uncommitted") == 0)
{
newXactIsoLevel = XACT_READ_UNCOMMITTED;
}
else if (strcmp(*newval, "default") == 0)
{
newXactIsoLevel = DefaultXactIsoLevel;
}
else
return false;
if (newXactIsoLevel != XactIsoLevel)
{
if (FirstSnapshotSet)
{
GUC_check_errcode(ERRCODE_ACTIVE_SQL_TRANSACTION);
GUC_check_errmsg("SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL must be called before any query");
return false;
}
/* We ignore a subtransaction setting it to the existing value. */
if (IsSubTransaction())
{
GUC_check_errcode(ERRCODE_ACTIVE_SQL_TRANSACTION);
GUC_check_errmsg("SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL must not be called in a subtransaction");
return false;
}
/* Can't go to serializable mode while recovery is still active */
if (newXactIsoLevel == XACT_SERIALIZABLE && RecoveryInProgress())
{
GUC_check_errmsg("cannot use serializable mode in a hot standby");
GUC_check_errhint("You can use REPEATABLE READ instead.");
return false;
}
}
*extra = malloc(sizeof(int));
if (!*extra)
return false;
*((int *) *extra) = newXactIsoLevel;
return true;
}
void
assign_XactIsoLevel(const char *newval, void *extra)
{
XactIsoLevel = *((int *) extra);
}
const char *
show_XactIsoLevel(void)
{
/* We need this because we don't want to show "default". */
switch (XactIsoLevel)
{
case XACT_READ_UNCOMMITTED:
return "read uncommitted";
case XACT_READ_COMMITTED:
return "read committed";
case XACT_REPEATABLE_READ:
return "repeatable read";
case XACT_SERIALIZABLE:
return "serializable";
default:
return "bogus";
}
}
/*
* SET TRANSACTION [NOT] DEFERRABLE
*/
bool
check_transaction_deferrable(bool *newval, void **extra, GucSource source)
{
if (IsSubTransaction())
{
GUC_check_errcode(ERRCODE_ACTIVE_SQL_TRANSACTION);
GUC_check_errmsg("SET TRANSACTION [NOT] DEFERRABLE cannot be called within a subtransaction");
return false;
}
if (FirstSnapshotSet)
{
GUC_check_errcode(ERRCODE_ACTIVE_SQL_TRANSACTION);
GUC_check_errmsg("SET TRANSACTION [NOT] DEFERRABLE must be called before any query");
return false;
}
return true;
}
/*
* Random number seed
*
* We can't roll back the random sequence on error, and we don't want
* config file reloads to affect it, so we only want interactive SET SEED
* commands to set it. We use the "extra" storage to ensure that rollbacks
* don't try to do the operation again.
*/
bool
check_random_seed(double *newval, void **extra, GucSource source)
{
*extra = malloc(sizeof(int));
if (!*extra)
return false;
/* Arm the assign only if source of value is an interactive SET */
*((int *) *extra) = (source >= PGC_S_INTERACTIVE);
return true;
}
void
assign_random_seed(double newval, void *extra)
{
/* We'll do this at most once for any setting of the GUC variable */
if (*((int *) extra))
DirectFunctionCall1(setseed, Float8GetDatum(newval));
*((int *) extra) = 0;
}
const char *
show_random_seed(void)
{
return "unavailable";
}
/*
* SET CLIENT_ENCODING
*/
bool
check_client_encoding(char **newval, void **extra, GucSource source)
{
int encoding;
const char *canonical_name;
/* Look up the encoding by name */
encoding = pg_valid_client_encoding(*newval);
if (encoding < 0)
return false;
/* Get the canonical name (no aliases, uniform case) */
canonical_name = pg_encoding_to_char(encoding);
/*
* If we are not within a transaction then PrepareClientEncoding will not
* be able to look up the necessary conversion procs. If we are still
* starting up, it will return "OK" anyway, and InitializeClientEncoding
* will fix things once initialization is far enough along. After
* startup, we'll fail. This would only happen if someone tries to change
* client_encoding in postgresql.conf and then SIGHUP existing sessions.
* It seems like a bad idea for client_encoding to change that way anyhow,
* so we don't go out of our way to support it.
*
* Note: in the postmaster, or any other process that never calls
* InitializeClientEncoding, PrepareClientEncoding will always succeed,
* and so will SetClientEncoding; but they won't do anything, which is OK.
*/
if (PrepareClientEncoding(encoding) < 0)
{
if (IsTransactionState())
{
/* Must be a genuine no-such-conversion problem */
GUC_check_errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED);
GUC_check_errdetail("Conversion between %s and %s is not supported.",
canonical_name,
GetDatabaseEncodingName());
}
else
{
/* Provide a useful complaint */
GUC_check_errdetail("Cannot change \"client_encoding\" now.");
}
return false;
}
/*
* Replace the user-supplied string with the encoding's canonical name.
* This gets rid of aliases and case-folding variations.
*
* XXX Although canonicalizing seems like a good idea in the abstract, it
* breaks pre-9.1 JDBC drivers, which expect that if they send "UNICODE"
* as the client_encoding setting then it will read back the same way. As
* a workaround, don't replace the string if it's "UNICODE". Remove that
* hack when pre-9.1 JDBC drivers are no longer in use.
*/
if (strcmp(*newval, canonical_name) != 0 &&
strcmp(*newval, "UNICODE") != 0)
{
free(*newval);
*newval = strdup(canonical_name);
if (!*newval)
return false;
}
/*
* Save the encoding's ID in *extra, for use by assign_client_encoding.
*/
*extra = malloc(sizeof(int));
if (!*extra)
return false;
*((int *) *extra) = encoding;
return true;
}
void
assign_client_encoding(const char *newval, void *extra)
{
int encoding = *((int *) extra);
/* We do not expect an error if PrepareClientEncoding succeeded */
if (SetClientEncoding(encoding) < 0)
elog(LOG, "SetClientEncoding(%d) failed", encoding);
}
/*
* SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION
*/
typedef struct
{
/* This is the "extra" state for both SESSION AUTHORIZATION and ROLE */
Oid roleid;
bool is_superuser;
} role_auth_extra;
bool
check_session_authorization(char **newval, void **extra, GucSource source)
{
HeapTuple roleTup;
Oid roleid;
bool is_superuser;
role_auth_extra *myextra;
/* Do nothing for the boot_val default of NULL */
if (*newval == NULL)
return true;
if (!IsTransactionState())
{
/*
* Can't do catalog lookups, so fail. The result of this is that
* session_authorization cannot be set in postgresql.conf, which seems
* like a good thing anyway, so we don't work hard to avoid it.
*/
return false;
}
/* Look up the username */
roleTup = SearchSysCache1(AUTHNAME, PointerGetDatum(*newval));
if (!HeapTupleIsValid(roleTup))
{
GUC_check_errmsg("role \"%s\" does not exist", *newval);
return false;
}
roleid = HeapTupleGetOid(roleTup);
is_superuser = ((Form_pg_authid) GETSTRUCT(roleTup))->rolsuper;
ReleaseSysCache(roleTup);
/* Set up "extra" struct for assign_session_authorization to use */
myextra = (role_auth_extra *) malloc(sizeof(role_auth_extra));
if (!myextra)
return false;
myextra->roleid = roleid;
myextra->is_superuser = is_superuser;
*extra = (void *) myextra;
return true;
}
void
assign_session_authorization(const char *newval, void *extra)
{
role_auth_extra *myextra = (role_auth_extra *) extra;
/* Do nothing for the boot_val default of NULL */
if (!myextra)
return;
SetSessionAuthorization(myextra->roleid, myextra->is_superuser);
}
/*
* SET ROLE
*
* The SQL spec requires "SET ROLE NONE" to unset the role, so we hardwire
* a translation of "none" to InvalidOid. Otherwise this is much like
* SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION.
*/
extern char *role_string; /* in guc.c */
bool
check_role(char **newval, void **extra, GucSource source)
{
HeapTuple roleTup;
Oid roleid;
bool is_superuser;
role_auth_extra *myextra;
if (strcmp(*newval, "none") == 0)
{
/* hardwired translation */
roleid = InvalidOid;
is_superuser = false;
}
else
{
if (!IsTransactionState())
{
/*
* Can't do catalog lookups, so fail. The result of this is that
* role cannot be set in postgresql.conf, which seems like a good
* thing anyway, so we don't work hard to avoid it.
*/
return false;
}
/* Look up the username */
roleTup = SearchSysCache1(AUTHNAME, PointerGetDatum(*newval));
if (!HeapTupleIsValid(roleTup))
{
GUC_check_errmsg("role \"%s\" does not exist", *newval);
return false;
}
roleid = HeapTupleGetOid(roleTup);
is_superuser = ((Form_pg_authid) GETSTRUCT(roleTup))->rolsuper;
ReleaseSysCache(roleTup);
/*
* Verify that session user is allowed to become this role
*/
if (!is_member_of_role(GetSessionUserId(), roleid))
{
GUC_check_errcode(ERRCODE_INSUFFICIENT_PRIVILEGE);
GUC_check_errmsg("permission denied to set role \"%s\"",
*newval);
return false;
}
}
/* Set up "extra" struct for assign_role to use */
myextra = (role_auth_extra *) malloc(sizeof(role_auth_extra));
if (!myextra)
return false;
myextra->roleid = roleid;
myextra->is_superuser = is_superuser;
*extra = (void *) myextra;
return true;
}
void
assign_role(const char *newval, void *extra)
{
role_auth_extra *myextra = (role_auth_extra *) extra;
SetCurrentRoleId(myextra->roleid, myextra->is_superuser);
}
const char *
show_role(void)
{
/*
* Check whether SET ROLE is active; if not return "none". This is a
* kluge to deal with the fact that SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION logically
* resets SET ROLE to NONE, but we cannot set the GUC role variable from
* assign_session_authorization (because we haven't got enough info to
* call set_config_option).
*/
if (!OidIsValid(GetCurrentRoleId()))
return "none";
/* Otherwise we can just use the GUC string */
return role_string ? role_string : "none";
}