Release 9.0.12
PostgreSQL 9.3.25 Documentation | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Prev | Up | Appendix E. Release Notes | Next |
Release date: 2013-02-07
This release contains a variety of fixes from 9.0.11. For information about new features in the 9.0 major release, see Section E.100 .
E.88.1. Migration to Version 9.0.12
A dump/restore is not required for those running 9.0.X.
However, if you are upgrading from a version earlier than 9.0.6, see Section E.94 .
E.88.2. Changes
-
Prevent execution of
enum_recv
from SQL (Tom Lane)The function was misdeclared, allowing a simple SQL command to crash the server. In principle an attacker might be able to use it to examine the contents of server memory. Our thanks to Sumit Soni (via Secunia SVCRP) for reporting this issue. (CVE-2013-0255)
-
Fix multiple problems in detection of when a consistent database state has been reached during WAL replay (Fujii Masao, Heikki Linnakangas, Simon Riggs, Andres Freund)
-
Update minimum recovery point when truncating a relation file (Heikki Linnakangas)
Once data has been discarded, it's no longer safe to stop recovery at an earlier point in the timeline.
-
Fix missing cancellations in hot standby mode (Noah Misch, Simon Riggs)
The need to cancel conflicting hot-standby queries would sometimes be missed, allowing those queries to see inconsistent data.
-
Fix SQL grammar to allow subscripting or field selection from a sub-SELECT result (Tom Lane)
-
Fix performance problems with autovacuum truncation in busy workloads (Jan Wieck)
Truncation of empty pages at the end of a table requires exclusive lock, but autovacuum was coded to fail (and release the table lock) when there are conflicting lock requests. Under load, it is easily possible that truncation would never occur, resulting in table bloat. Fix by performing a partial truncation, releasing the lock, then attempting to re-acquire the lock and continue. This fix also greatly reduces the average time before autovacuum releases the lock after a conflicting request arrives.
-
Protect against race conditions when scanning pg_tablespace (Stephen Frost, Tom Lane)
CREATE DATABASE and DROP DATABASE could misbehave if there were concurrent updates of pg_tablespace entries.
-
Prevent DROP OWNED from trying to drop whole databases or tablespaces (Álvaro Herrera)
For safety, ownership of these objects must be reassigned, not dropped.
-
Fix error in vacuum_freeze_table_age implementation (Andres Freund)
In installations that have existed for more than vacuum_freeze_min_age transactions, this mistake prevented autovacuum from using partial-table scans, so that a full-table scan would always happen instead.
-
Prevent misbehavior when a RowExpr or XmlExpr is parse-analyzed twice (Andres Freund, Tom Lane)
This mistake could be user-visible in contexts such as CREATE TABLE LIKE INCLUDING INDEXES .
-
Improve defenses against integer overflow in hashtable sizing calculations (Jeff Davis)
-
Reject out-of-range dates in
to_date()
(Hitoshi Harada) -
Ensure that non-ASCII prompt strings are translated to the correct code page on Windows (Alexander Law, Noah Misch)
This bug affected psql and some other client programs.
-
Fix possible crash in psql 's \? command when not connected to a database (Meng Qingzhong)
-
Fix pg_upgrade to deal with invalid indexes safely (Bruce Momjian)
-
Fix one-byte buffer overrun in libpq 's
PQprintTuples
(Xi Wang)This ancient function is not used anywhere by PostgreSQL itself, but it might still be used by some client code.
-
Make ecpglib use translated messages properly (Chen Huajun)
-
Properly install ecpg_compat and pgtypes libraries on MSVC (Jiang Guiqing)
-
Include our version of
isinf()
in libecpg if it's not provided by the system (Jiang Guiqing) -
Rearrange configure's tests for supplied functions so it is not fooled by bogus exports from libedit/libreadline (Christoph Berg)
-
Ensure Windows build number increases over time (Magnus Hagander)
-
Make pgxs build executables with the right .exe suffix when cross-compiling for Windows (Zoltan Boszormenyi)
-
Add new timezone abbreviation FET (Tom Lane)
This is now used in some eastern-European time zones.