E.59. Release 9.3.25
Release date: 2018-11-08
This release contains a variety of fixes from 9.3.24. For information about new features in the 9.3 major release, see Section E.84 .
This is expected to be the last PostgreSQL release in the 9.3.X series. Users are encouraged to update to a newer release branch soon.
E.59.1. Migration to Version 9.3.25
A dump/restore is not required for those running 9.3.X.
However, if you are upgrading from a version earlier than 9.3.23, see Section E.61 .
E.59.2. Changes
-
Fix corner-case failures in
has_
family of functions (Tom Lane)foo
_privilege()Return NULL rather than throwing an error when an invalid object OID is provided. Some of these functions got that right already, but not all.
has_column_privilege()
was additionally capable of crashing on some platforms. -
Avoid O(N^2) slowdown in regular expression match/split functions on long strings (Andrew Gierth)
-
Avoid O(N^3) slowdown in lexer for long strings of
+
or-
characters (Andrew Gierth) -
Fix mis-execution of SubPlans when the outer query is being scanned backwards (Andrew Gierth)
-
Fix failure of
UPDATE/DELETE ... WHERE CURRENT OF ...
after rewinding the referenced cursor (Tom Lane)A cursor that scans multiple relations (particularly an inheritance tree) could produce wrong behavior if rewound to an earlier relation.
-
Fix
EvalPlanQual
to handle conditionally-executed InitPlans properly (Andrew Gierth, Tom Lane)This resulted in hard-to-reproduce crashes or wrong answers in concurrent updates, if they contained code such as an uncorrelated sub-
SELECT
inside aCASE
construct. -
Fix character-class checks to not fail on Windows for Unicode characters above U+FFFF (Tom Lane, Kenji Uno)
This bug affected full-text-search operations, as well as
contrib/ltree
andcontrib/pg_trgm
. -
Ensure that sequences owned by a foreign table are processed by
ALTER OWNER
on the table (Peter Eisentraut)The ownership change should propagate to such sequences as well, but this was missed for foreign tables.
-
Fix over-allocation of space for
array_out()
's result string (Keiichi Hirobe) -
Fix memory leak in repeated SP-GiST index scans (Tom Lane)
This is only known to amount to anything significant in cases where an exclusion constraint using SP-GiST receives many new index entries in a single command.
-
Avoid crash if a utility command causes infinite recursion (Tom Lane)
-
When initializing a hot standby, cope with duplicate XIDs caused by two-phase transactions on the master (Michael Paquier, Konstantin Knizhnik)
-
Randomize the
random()
seed in bootstrap and standalone backends, and in initdb (Noah Misch)The main practical effect of this change is that it avoids a scenario where initdb might mistakenly conclude that POSIX shared memory is not available, due to name collisions caused by always using the same random seed.
-
Ensure that hot standby processes use the correct WAL consistency point (Alexander Kukushkin, Michael Paquier)
This prevents possible misbehavior just after a standby server has reached a consistent database state during WAL replay.
-
Don't run atexit callbacks when servicing
SIGQUIT
(Heikki Linnakangas) -
Don't record foreign-server user mappings as members of extensions (Tom Lane)
If
CREATE USER MAPPING
is executed in an extension script, an extension dependency was created for the user mapping, which is unexpected. Roles can't be extension members, so user mappings shouldn't be either. -
Make syslogger more robust against failures in opening CSV log files (Tom Lane)
-
Fix possible inconsistency in pg_dump 's sorting of dissimilar object names (Jacob Champion)
-
Ensure that pg_restore will schema-qualify the table name when emitting
DISABLE
/ENABLE TRIGGER
commands (Tom Lane)This avoids failures due to the new policy of running restores with restrictive search path.
-
Fix pg_upgrade to handle event triggers in extensions correctly (Haribabu Kommi)
pg_upgrade failed to preserve an event trigger's extension-membership status.
-
Fix pg_upgrade 's cluster state check to work correctly on a standby server (Bruce Momjian)
-
Enforce type
cube
's dimension limit in allcontrib/cube
functions (Andrey Borodin)Previously, some cube-related functions could construct values that would be rejected by
cube_in()
, leading to dump/reload failures. -
Fix
contrib/unaccent
'sunaccent()
function to use theunaccent
text search dictionary that is in the same schema as the function (Tom Lane)Previously it tried to look up the dictionary using the search path, which could fail if the search path has a restrictive value.
-
Fix build problems on macOS 10.14 (Mojave) (Tom Lane)
Adjust configure to add an
-isysroot
switch toCPPFLAGS
; without this, PL/Perl and PL/Tcl fail to configure or build on macOS 10.14. The specific sysroot used can be overridden at configure time or build time by setting thePG_SYSROOT
variable in the arguments of configure or make .It is now recommended that Perl-related extensions write
$(perl_includespec)
rather than-I$(perl_archlibexp)/CORE
in their compiler flags. The latter continues to work on most platforms, but not recent macOS.Also, it should no longer be necessary to specify
--with-tclconfig
manually to get PL/Tcl to build on recent macOS releases. -
Fix MSVC build and regression-test scripts to work on recent Perl versions (Andrew Dunstan)
Perl no longer includes the current directory in its search path by default; work around that.
-
Support building on Windows with Visual Studio 2015 or Visual Studio 2017 (Michael Paquier, Haribabu Kommi)
-
Allow btree comparison functions to return
INT_MIN
(Tom Lane)Up to now, we've forbidden datatype-specific comparison functions from returning
INT_MIN
, which allows callers to invert the sort order just by negating the comparison result. However, this was never safe for comparison functions that directly return the result ofmemcmp()
,strcmp()
, etc, as POSIX doesn't place any such restriction on those functions. At least some recent versions ofmemcmp()
can returnINT_MIN
, causing incorrect sort ordering. Hence, we've removed this restriction. Callers must now use theINVERT_COMPARE_RESULT()
macro if they wish to invert the sort order. -
Fix recursion hazard in shared-invalidation message processing (Tom Lane)
This error could, for example, result in failure to access a system catalog or index that had just been processed by
VACUUM FULL
.This change adds a new result code for
LockAcquire
, which might possibly affect external callers of that function, though only very unusual usage patterns would have an issue with it. The API ofLockAcquireExtended
is also changed. -
Save and restore SPI's global variables during
SPI_connect()
andSPI_finish()
(Chapman Flack, Tom Lane)This prevents possible interference when one SPI-using function calls another.
-
Provide
ALLOCSET_DEFAULT_SIZES
and sibling macros in back branches (Tom Lane)These macros have existed since 9.6, but there were requests to add them to older branches to allow extensions to rely on them without branch-specific coding.
-
Avoid using potentially-under-aligned page buffers (Tom Lane)
Invent new union types
PGAlignedBlock
andPGAlignedXLogBlock
, and use these in place of plain char arrays, ensuring that the compiler can't place the buffer at a misaligned start address. This fixes potential core dumps on alignment-picky platforms, and may improve performance even on platforms that allow misalignment. -
Make
src/port/snprintf.c
follow the C99 standard's definition ofsnprintf()
's result value (Tom Lane)On platforms where this code is used (mostly Windows), its pre-C99 behavior could lead to failure to detect buffer overrun, if the calling code assumed C99 semantics.
-
When building on i386 with the clang compiler, require
-msse2
to be used (Andres Freund)This avoids problems with missed floating point overflow checks.
-
Fix configure 's detection of the result type of
strerror_r()
(Tom Lane)The previous coding got the wrong answer when building with icc on Linux (and perhaps in other cases), leading to libpq not returning useful error messages for system-reported errors.
-
Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2018g for DST law changes in Chile, Fiji, Morocco, and Russia (Volgograd), plus historical corrections for China, Hawaii, Japan, Macau, and North Korea.