-
postgresql-8.4 (8.4.14-0ubuntu11.04) natty-proposed; urgency=low
* New upstream bug fix release: (LP: #1055944)
- Fix planner's assignment of executor parameters, and fix executor's
rescan logic for CTE plan nodes.
These errors could result in wrong answers from queries that scan
the same WITH subquery multiple times.
- Improve page-splitting decisions in GiST indexes.
Multi-column GiST indexes might suffer unexpected bloat due to this
error.
- Fix cascading privilege revoke to stop if privileges are still held.
If we revoke a grant option from some role "X", but "X" still holds
that option via a grant from someone else, we should not
recursively revoke the corresponding privilege from role(s) "Y"
that "X" had granted it to.
- Fix handling of SIGFPE when PL/Perl is in use.
Perl resets the process's SIGFPE handler to SIG_IGN, which could
result in crashes later on. Restore the normal Postgres signal
handler after initializing PL/Perl.
- Prevent PL/Perl from crashing if a recursive PL/Perl function is
redefined while being executed.
- Work around possible misoptimization in PL/Perl.
Some Linux distributions contain an incorrect version of
"pthread.h" that results in incorrect compiled code in PL/Perl,
leading to crashes if a PL/Perl function calls another one that
throws an error.
-- Martin Pitt <email address hidden> Tue, 25 Sep 2012 07:34:06 +0200
-
postgresql-8.4 (8.4.13-0ubuntu11.04) natty-security; urgency=low
* New upstream security/bug fix release:
- Prevent access to external files/URLs via XML entity references
(Noah Misch, Tom Lane)
xml_parse() would attempt to fetch external files or URLs as needed
to resolve DTD and entity references in an XML value, thus allowing
unprivileged database users to attempt to fetch data with the
privileges of the database server. While the external data wouldn't
get returned directly to the user, portions of it could be exposed
in error messages if the data didn't parse as valid XML; and in any
case the mere ability to check existence of a file might be useful
to an attacker. (CVE-2012-3489)
- Prevent access to external files/URLs via "contrib/xml2"'s
xslt_process() (Peter Eisentraut)
libxslt offers the ability to read and write both files and URLs
through stylesheet commands, thus allowing unprivileged database
users to both read and write data with the privileges of the
database server. Disable that through proper use of libxslt's
security options. (CVE-2012-3488)
Also, remove xslt_process()'s ability to fetch documents and
stylesheets from external files/URLs. While this was a documented
"feature", it was long regarded as a bad idea. The fix for
CVE-2012-3489 broke that capability, and rather than expend effort
on trying to fix it, we're just going to summarily remove it.
- Prevent too-early recycling of btree index pages (Noah Misch)
When we allowed read-only transactions to skip assigning XIDs, we
introduced the possibility that a deleted btree page could be
recycled while a read-only transaction was still in flight to it.
This would result in incorrect index search results. The
probability of such an error occurring in the field seems very low
because of the timing requirements, but nonetheless it should be
fixed.
- Fix crash-safety bug with newly-created-or-reset sequences (Tom
Lane)
If "ALTER SEQUENCE" was executed on a freshly created or reset
sequence, and then precisely one nextval() call was made on it, and
then the server crashed, WAL replay would restore the sequence to a
state in which it appeared that no nextval() had been done, thus
allowing the first sequence value to be returned again by the next
nextval() call. In particular this could manifest for serial
columns, since creation of a serial column's sequence includes an
"ALTER SEQUENCE OWNED BY" step.
- Ensure the "backup_label" file is fsync'd after pg_start_backup()
(Dave Kerr)
- Back-patch 9.1 improvement to compress the fsync request queue
(Robert Haas)
This improves performance during checkpoints. The 9.1 change has
now seen enough field testing to seem safe to back-patch.
- Only allow autovacuum to be auto-canceled by a directly blocked
process (Tom Lane)
The original coding could allow inconsistent behavior in some
cases; in particular, an autovacuum could get canceled after less
than deadlock_timeout grace period.
- Improve logging of autovacuum cancels (Robert Haas)
- Fix log collector so that log_truncate_on_rotation works during the
very first log rotation after server start (Tom Lane)
- Fix WITH attached to a nested set operation
(UNION/INTERSECT/EXCEPT) (Tom Lane)
- Ensure that a whole-row reference to a subquery doesn't include any
extra GROUP BY or ORDER BY columns (Tom Lane)
- Disallow copying whole-row references in CHECK constraints and
index definitions during "CREATE TABLE" (Tom Lane)
This situation can arise in "CREATE TABLE" with LIKE or INHERITS.
The copied whole-row variable was incorrectly labeled with the row
type of the original table not the new one. Rejecting the case
seems reasonable for LIKE, since the row types might well diverge
later. For INHERITS we should ideally allow it, with an implicit
coercion to the parent table's row type; but that will require more
work than seems safe to back-patch.
- Fix memory leak in ARRAY(SELECT ...) subqueries (Heikki
Linnakangas, Tom Lane)
- Fix extraction of common prefixes from regular expressions (Tom
Lane)
The code could get confused by quantified parenthesized
subexpressions, such as ^(foo)?bar. This would lead to incorrect
index optimization of searches for such patterns.
- Fix bugs with parsing signed "hh":"mm" and "hh":"mm":"ss" fields in
interval constants (Amit Kapila, Tom Lane)
- Report errors properly in "contrib/xml2"'s xslt_process() (Tom
Lane)
- Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2012e for DST law
changes in Morocco and Tokelau
-- Jamie Strandboge <email address hidden> Thu, 16 Aug 2012 17:10:53 -0500
-
postgresql-8.4 (8.4.12-0ubuntu11.04) natty-security; urgency=low
* New upstream security/bug fix release: (LP: #1008317)
- Fix incorrect password transformation in "contrib/pgcrypto"'s DES
crypt() function.
If a password string contained the byte value 0x80, the remainder
of the password was ignored, causing the password to be much weaker
than it appeared. With this fix, the rest of the string is properly
included in the DES hash. Any stored password values that are
affected by this bug will thus no longer match, so the stored
values may need to be updated. (CVE-2012-2143)
- Ignore SECURITY DEFINER and SET attributes for a procedural
language's call handler.
Applying such attributes to a call handler could crash the server.
(CVE-2012-2655)
- Allow numeric timezone offsets in timestamp input to be up to 16
hours away from UTC.
Some historical time zones have offsets larger than 15 hours, the
previous limit. This could result in dumped data values being
rejected during reload.
- Fix timestamp conversion to cope when the given time is exactly the
last DST transition time for the current timezone.
This oversight has been there a long time, but was not noticed
previously because most DST-using zones are presumed to have an
indefinite sequence of future DST transitions.
- Fix text to name and char to name casts to perform string
truncation correctly in multibyte encodings.
- Fix memory copying bug in to_tsquery().
- Fix planner's handling of outer PlaceHolderVars within subqueries.
This bug concerns sub-SELECTs that reference variables coming from
the nullable side of an outer join of the surrounding query. In
9.1, queries affected by this bug would fail with "ERROR:
Upper-level PlaceHolderVar found where not expected". But in 9.0
and 8.4, you'd silently get possibly-wrong answers, since the value
transmitted into the subquery wouldn't go to null when it should.
- Fix slow session startup when pg_attribute is very large.
If pg_attribute exceeds one-fourth of shared_buffers, cache
rebuilding code that is sometimes needed during session start would
trigger the synchronized-scan logic, causing it to take many times
longer than normal. The problem was particularly acute if many new
sessions were starting at once.
- Ensure sequential scans check for query cancel reasonably often.
A scan encountering many consecutive pages that contain no live
tuples would not respond to interrupts meanwhile.
- Ensure the Windows implementation of PGSemaphoreLock() clears
ImmediateInterruptOK before returning.
This oversight meant that a query-cancel interrupt received later
in the same query could be accepted at an unsafe time, with
unpredictable but not good consequences.
- Show whole-row variables safely when printing views or rules.
Corner cases involving ambiguous names (that is, the name could be
either a table or column name of the query) were printed in an
ambiguous way, risking that the view or rule would be interpreted
differently after dump and reload. Avoid the ambiguous case by
attaching a no-op cast.
- Fix "COPY FROM" to properly handle null marker strings that
correspond to invalid encoding.
A null marker string such as E'\\0' should work, and did work in
the past, but the case got broken in 8.4.
- Ensure autovacuum worker processes perform stack depth checking
properly.
Previously, infinite recursion in a function invoked by
auto-"ANALYZE" could crash worker processes.
- Fix logging collector to not lose log coherency under high load.
The collector previously could fail to reassemble large messages if
it got too busy.
- Fix logging collector to ensure it will restart file rotation after
receiving SIGHUP.
- Fix WAL replay logic for GIN indexes to not fail if the index was
subsequently dropped>
- Fix memory leak in PL/pgSQL's "RETURN NEXT" command.
- Fix PL/pgSQL's "GET DIAGNOSTICS" command when the target is the
function's first variable.
- Fix potential access off the end of memory in psql's expanded
display ("\x") mode.
- Fix several performance problems in pg_dump when the database
contains many objects.
pg_dump could get very slow if the database contained many schemas,
or if many objects are in dependency loops, or if there are many
owned sequences.
- Fix "contrib/dblink"'s dblink_exec() to not leak temporary database
connections upon error.
- Fix "contrib/dblink" to report the correct connection name in error
messages.
-- Martin Pitt <email address hidden> Mon, 04 Jun 2012 08:33:03 +0200
-
postgresql-8.4 (8.4.11-0ubuntu0.11.04) natty-security; urgency=low
* New upstream bug fix/security release: (LP: #941912)
- Require execute permission on the trigger function for "CREATE
TRIGGER".
This missing check could allow another user to execute a trigger
function with forged input data, by installing it on a table he
owns. This is only of significance for trigger functions marked
SECURITY DEFINER, since otherwise trigger functions run as the
table owner anyway. (CVE-2012-0866)
- Remove arbitrary limitation on length of common name in SSL
certificates.
Both libpq and the server truncated the common name extracted from
an SSL certificate at 32 bytes. Normally this would cause nothing
worse than an unexpected verification failure, but there are some
rather-implausible scenarios in which it might allow one
certificate holder to impersonate another. The victim would have to
have a common name exactly 32 bytes long, and the attacker would
have to persuade a trusted CA to issue a certificate in which the
common name has that string as a prefix. Impersonating a server
would also require some additional exploit to redirect client
connections. (CVE-2012-0867)
- Convert newlines to spaces in names written in pg_dump comments.
pg_dump was incautious about sanitizing object names that are
emitted within SQL comments in its output script. A name containing
a newline would at least render the script syntactically incorrect.
Maliciously crafted object names could present a SQL injection risk
when the script is reloaded. (CVE-2012-0868)
- Fix btree index corruption from insertions concurrent with
vacuuming.
An index page split caused by an insertion could sometimes cause a
concurrently-running "VACUUM" to miss removing index entries that
it should remove. After the corresponding table rows are removed,
the dangling index entries would cause errors (such as "could not
read block N in file ...") or worse, silently wrong query results
after unrelated rows are re-inserted at the now-free table
locations. This bug has been present since release 8.2, but occurs
so infrequently that it was not diagnosed until now. If you have
reason to suspect that it has happened in your database, reindexing
the affected index will fix things.
- Update per-column permissions, not only per-table permissions, when
changing table owner.
Failure to do this meant that any previously granted column
permissions were still shown as having been granted by the old
owner. This meant that neither the new owner nor a superuser could
revoke the now-untraceable-to-table-owner permissions.
- Allow non-existent values for some settings in "ALTER USER/DATABASE
SET".
Allow default_text_search_config, default_tablespace, and
temp_tablespaces to be set to names that are not known. This is
because they might be known in another database where the setting
is intended to be used, or for the tablespace cases because the
tablespace might not be created yet. The same issue was previously
recognized for search_path, and these settings now act like that
one.
- Avoid crashing when we have problems deleting table files
post-commit.
Dropping a table should lead to deleting the underlying disk files
only after the transaction commits. In event of failure then (for
instance, because of wrong file permissions) the code is supposed
to just emit a warning message and go on, since it's too late to
abort the transaction. This logic got broken as of release 8.4,
causing such situations to result in a PANIC and an unrestartable
database.
- Track the OID counter correctly during WAL replay, even when it
wraps around.
Previously the OID counter would remain stuck at a high value until
the system exited replay mode. The practical consequences of that
are usually nil, but there are scenarios wherein a standby server
that's been promoted to master might take a long time to advance
the OID counter to a reasonable value once values are needed.
- Fix regular expression back-references with - attached.
Rather than enforcing an exact string match, the code would
effectively accept any string that satisfies the pattern
sub-expression referenced by the back-reference symbol.
A similar problem still afflicts back-references that are embedded
in a larger quantified expression, rather than being the immediate
subject of the quantifier. This will be addressed in a future
PostgreSQL release.
- Fix recently-introduced memory leak in processing of inet/cidr
values.
- Fix dangling pointer after "CREATE TABLE AS"/"SELECT INTO" in a
SQL-language function.
In most cases this only led to an assertion failure in
assert-enabled builds, but worse consequences seem possible.
- Fix I/O-conversion-related memory leaks in plpgsql.
- Improve pg_dump's handling of inherited table columns.
pg_dump mishandled situations where a child column has a different
default expression than its parent column. If the default is
textually identical to the parent's default, but not actually the
same (for instance, because of schema search path differences) it
would not be recognized as different, so that after dump and
restore the child would be allowed to inherit the parent's default.
Child columns that are NOT NULL where their parent is not could
also be restored subtly incorrectly.
- Fix pg_restore's direct-to-database mode for INSERT-style table
data.
Direct-to-database restores from archive files made with
"--inserts" or "--column-inserts" options fail when using
pg_restore from a release dated September or December 2011, as a
result of an oversight in a fix for another problem. The archive
file itself is not at fault, and text-mode output is okay.
- Allow AT option in ecpg DEALLOCATE statements.
The infrastructure to support this has been there for awhile, but
through an oversight there was still an error check rejecting the
case.
- Fix error in "contrib/intarray"'s int[] & int[] operator.
If the smallest integer the two input arrays have in common is 1,
and there are smaller values in either array, then 1 would be
incorrectly omitted from the result.
- Fix error detection in "contrib/pgcrypto"'s encrypt_iv() and
decrypt_iv().
These functions failed to report certain types of invalid-input
errors, and would instead return random garbage values for
incorrect input.
- Fix one-byte buffer overrun in "contrib/test_parser".
The code would try to read one more byte than it should, which
would crash in corner cases. Since "contrib/test_parser" is only
example code, this is not a security issue in itself, but bad
example code is still bad.
- Use __sync_lock_test_and_set() for spinlocks on ARM, if available.
This function replaces our previous use of the SWPB instruction,
which is deprecated and not available on ARMv6 and later. Reports
suggest that the old code doesn't fail in an obvious way on recent
ARM boards, but simply doesn't interlock concurrent accesses,
leading to bizarre failures in multiprocess operation.
- Use "-fexcess-precision=standard" option when building with gcc
versions that accept it.
This prevents assorted scenarios wherein recent versions of gcc
will produce creative results.
- Allow use of threaded Python on FreeBSD.
Our configure script previously believed that this combination
wouldn't work; but FreeBSD fixed the problem, so remove that error
check.
* Drop 00git_inet_cidr_unpack.patch, 04-armel-tas.patch, applied upstream.
-- Martin Pitt <email address hidden> Mon, 27 Feb 2012 15:05:31 +0100
-
postgresql-8.4 (8.4.10-0ubuntu0.11.04.1) natty-proposed; urgency=low
* Add 00git_inet_cidr_unpack.patch: Revert the behavior of inet/cidr
functions to not unpack the arguments. This fixes the memory leak when
sorting inet values. Patch taken from upstream git HEAD. Spotted during
testing in LP #904631.
* 01-armel-tas.patch: Turn slock_t datatype into an int, and define
S_UNLOCK() to call __sync_lock_release() instead of using the default
implementation. This complies to the gcc built-in atomic operations
specifiction more strictly and now also works on the Panda boards.
(LP: #904828)
postgresql-8.4 (8.4.10-0ubuntu0.11.04) natty-proposed; urgency=low
* New upstream release (LP: #904631):
- Fix bugs in information_schema.referential_constraints view.
This view was being insufficiently careful about matching the
foreign-key constraint to the depended-on primary or unique key
constraint. That could result in failure to show a foreign key
constraint at all, or showing it multiple times, or claiming that
it depends on a different constraint than the one it really does.
Since the view definition is installed by initdb, merely upgrading
will not fix the problem. If you need to fix this in an existing
installation, you can (as a superuser) drop the information_schema
schema then re-create it by sourcing
"SHAREDIR/information_schema.sql". (Run pg_config --sharedir if
you're uncertain where "SHAREDIR" is.) This must be repeated in
each database to be fixed.
- Fix incorrect replay of WAL records for GIN index updates.
This could result in transiently failing to find index entries
after a crash, or on a hot-standby server. The problem would be
repaired by the next "VACUUM" of the index, however.
- Fix TOAST-related data corruption during CREATE TABLE dest AS
SELECT - FROM src or INSERT INTO dest SELECT * FROM src.
If a table has been modified by "ALTER TABLE ADD COLUMN", attempts
to copy its data verbatim to another table could produce corrupt
results in certain corner cases. The problem can only manifest in
this precise form in 8.4 and later, but we patched earlier versions
as well in case there are other code paths that could trigger the
same bug.
- Fix race condition during toast table access from stale syscache
entries.
- Track dependencies of functions on items used in parameter default
expressions. Previously, a referenced object could be dropped without
having dropped or modified the function, leading to misbehavior when the
function was used. Note that merely installing this update will not fix
the missing dependency entries; to do that, you'd need to "CREATE OR
REPLACE" each such function afterwards. If you have functions whose
defaults depend on non-built-in objects, doing so is recommended.
- Allow inlining of set-returning SQL functions with multiple OUT
parameters.
- Make DatumGetInetP() unpack inet datums that have a 1-byte header,
and add a new macro, DatumGetInetPP(), that does not.
- Improve locale support in money type's input and output.
Aside from not supporting all standard lc_monetary formatting
options, the input and output functions were inconsistent, meaning
there were locales in which dumped money values could not be
re-read.
- Don't let transform_null_equals affect CASE foo WHEN NULL ...
constructs. transform_null_equals is only supposed to affect foo = NULL
expressions written directly by the user, not equality checks
generated internally by this form of CASE.
- Change foreign-key trigger creation order to better support
self-referential foreign keys. For a cascading foreign key that
references its own table, a row update will fire both the ON UPDATE
trigger and the CHECK trigger as one event. The ON UPDATE trigger must
execute first, else the CHECK will check a non-final state of the row
and possibly throw an inappropriate error. However, the firing order of
these triggers is determined by their names, which generally sort in
creation order since the triggers have auto-generated names following
the convention "RI_ConstraintTrigger_NNNN". A proper fix would require
modifying that convention, which we will do in 9.2, but it seems risky
to change it in existing releases. So this patch just changes the
creation order of the triggers. Users encountering this type of error
should drop and re-create the foreign key constraint to get its triggers
into the right order.
- Avoid floating-point underflow while tracking buffer allocation
rate.
- Preserve blank lines within commands in psql's command history.
The former behavior could cause problems if an empty line was
removed from within a string literal, for example.
- Fix pg_dump to dump user-defined casts between auto-generated
types, such as table rowtypes.
- Use the preferred version of xsubpp to build PL/Perl, not
necessarily the operating system's main copy.
- Fix incorrect coding in "contrib/dict_int" and "contrib/dict_xsyn".
- Honor query cancel interrupts promptly in pgstatindex().
- Ensure VPATH builds properly install all server header files.
- Shorten file names reported in verbose error messages.
Regular builds have always reported just the name of the C file
containing the error message call, but VPATH builds formerly
reported an absolute path name.
-- Martin Pitt <email address hidden> Thu, 05 Jan 2012 13:09:44 +0100
-
postgresql-8.4 (8.4.10-0ubuntu0.11.04) natty-proposed; urgency=low
* New upstream release (LP: #904631):
- Fix bugs in information_schema.referential_constraints view.
This view was being insufficiently careful about matching the
foreign-key constraint to the depended-on primary or unique key
constraint. That could result in failure to show a foreign key
constraint at all, or showing it multiple times, or claiming that
it depends on a different constraint than the one it really does.
Since the view definition is installed by initdb, merely upgrading
will not fix the problem. If you need to fix this in an existing
installation, you can (as a superuser) drop the information_schema
schema then re-create it by sourcing
"SHAREDIR/information_schema.sql". (Run pg_config --sharedir if
you're uncertain where "SHAREDIR" is.) This must be repeated in
each database to be fixed.
- Fix incorrect replay of WAL records for GIN index updates.
This could result in transiently failing to find index entries
after a crash, or on a hot-standby server. The problem would be
repaired by the next "VACUUM" of the index, however.
- Fix TOAST-related data corruption during CREATE TABLE dest AS
SELECT - FROM src or INSERT INTO dest SELECT * FROM src.
If a table has been modified by "ALTER TABLE ADD COLUMN", attempts
to copy its data verbatim to another table could produce corrupt
results in certain corner cases. The problem can only manifest in
this precise form in 8.4 and later, but we patched earlier versions
as well in case there are other code paths that could trigger the
same bug.
- Fix race condition during toast table access from stale syscache
entries.
- Track dependencies of functions on items used in parameter default
expressions. Previously, a referenced object could be dropped without
having dropped or modified the function, leading to misbehavior when the
function was used. Note that merely installing this update will not fix
the missing dependency entries; to do that, you'd need to "CREATE OR
REPLACE" each such function afterwards. If you have functions whose
defaults depend on non-built-in objects, doing so is recommended.
- Allow inlining of set-returning SQL functions with multiple OUT
parameters.
- Make DatumGetInetP() unpack inet datums that have a 1-byte header,
and add a new macro, DatumGetInetPP(), that does not.
- Improve locale support in money type's input and output.
Aside from not supporting all standard lc_monetary formatting
options, the input and output functions were inconsistent, meaning
there were locales in which dumped money values could not be
re-read.
- Don't let transform_null_equals affect CASE foo WHEN NULL ...
constructs. transform_null_equals is only supposed to affect foo = NULL
expressions written directly by the user, not equality checks
generated internally by this form of CASE.
- Change foreign-key trigger creation order to better support
self-referential foreign keys. For a cascading foreign key that
references its own table, a row update will fire both the ON UPDATE
trigger and the CHECK trigger as one event. The ON UPDATE trigger must
execute first, else the CHECK will check a non-final state of the row
and possibly throw an inappropriate error. However, the firing order of
these triggers is determined by their names, which generally sort in
creation order since the triggers have auto-generated names following
the convention "RI_ConstraintTrigger_NNNN". A proper fix would require
modifying that convention, which we will do in 9.2, but it seems risky
to change it in existing releases. So this patch just changes the
creation order of the triggers. Users encountering this type of error
should drop and re-create the foreign key constraint to get its triggers
into the right order.
- Avoid floating-point underflow while tracking buffer allocation
rate.
- Preserve blank lines within commands in psql's command history.
The former behavior could cause problems if an empty line was
removed from within a string literal, for example.
- Fix pg_dump to dump user-defined casts between auto-generated
types, such as table rowtypes.
- Use the preferred version of xsubpp to build PL/Perl, not
necessarily the operating system's main copy.
- Fix incorrect coding in "contrib/dict_int" and "contrib/dict_xsyn".
- Honor query cancel interrupts promptly in pgstatindex().
- Ensure VPATH builds properly install all server header files.
- Shorten file names reported in verbose error messages.
Regular builds have always reported just the name of the C file
containing the error message call, but VPATH builds formerly
reported an absolute path name.
-- Martin Pitt <email address hidden> Thu, 15 Dec 2011 10:56:20 +0100
-
postgresql-8.4 (8.4.9-0ubuntu0.11.04) natty-security; urgency=low
* New upstream bug fix/security release: (LP: #866049)
- Fix bugs in indexing of in-doubt HOT-updated tuples.
These bugs could result in index corruption after reindexing a
system catalog. They are not believed to affect user indexes.
- Fix multiple bugs in GiST index page split processing.
The probability of occurrence was low, but these could lead to
index corruption.
- Fix possible buffer overrun in tsvector_concat().
The function could underestimate the amount of memory needed for
its result, leading to server crashes.
- Fix crash in xml_recv when processing a "standalone" parameter.
- Make pg_options_to_table return NULL for an option with no value.
Previously such cases would result in a server crash.
- Avoid possibly accessing off the end of memory in "ANALYZE" and in
SJIS-2004 encoding conversion.
This fixes some very-low-probability server crash scenarios.
- Prevent intermittent hang in interactions of startup process with
bgwriter process.
This affected recovery in non-hot-standby cases.
- Fix race condition in relcache init file invalidation.
There was a window wherein a new backend process could read a stale
init file but miss the inval messages that would tell it the data
is stale. The result would be bizarre failures in catalog accesses,
typically "could not read block 0 in file ..." later during
startup.
- Fix memory leak at end of a GiST index scan.
Commands that perform many separate GiST index scans, such as
verification of a new GiST-based exclusion constraint on a table
already containing many rows, could transiently require large
amounts of memory due to this leak.
- Fix incorrect memory accounting (leading to possible memory bloat)
in tuplestores supporting holdable cursors and plpgsql's RETURN
NEXT command.
- Fix performance problem when constructing a large, lossy bitmap.
- Fix join selectivity estimation for unique columns.
This fixes an erroneous planner heuristic that could lead to poor
estimates of the result size of a join.
- Fix nested PlaceHolderVar expressions that appear only in
sub-select target lists. This mistake could result in outputs of an
outer join incorrectly appearing as NULL.
- Allow nested EXISTS queries to be optimized properly.
- Fix array- and path-creating functions to ensure padding bytes are
zeroes. This avoids some situations where the planner will think that
semantically-equal constants are not equal, resulting in poor
optimization.
- Fix "EXPLAIN" to handle gating Result nodes within inner-indexscan
subplans. The usual symptom of this oversight was "bogus varno" errors.
- Work around gcc 4.6.0 bug that breaks WAL replay. This could lead to
loss of committed transactions after a server crash.
- Fix dump bug for VALUES in a view.
- Disallow SELECT FOR UPDATE/SHARE on sequences.
This operation doesn't work as expected and can lead to failures.
- Fix "VACUUM" so that it always updates pg_class.reltuples/relpages.
This fixes some scenarios where autovacuum could make increasingly
poor decisions about when to vacuum tables.
- Defend against integer overflow when computing size of a hash table.
- Fix cases where "CLUSTER" might attempt to access already-removed
TOAST data.
- Fix portability bugs in use of credentials control messages for
"peer" authentication.
- Fix SSPI login when multiple roundtrips are required.
The typical symptom of this problem was "The function requested is
not supported" errors during SSPI login.
- Throw an error if "pg_hba.conf" contains hostssl but SSL is
disabled. This was concluded to be more user-friendly than the
previous behavior of silently ignoring such lines.
- Fix typo in pg_srand48 seed initialization.
This led to failure to use all bits of the provided seed. This
function is not used on most platforms (only those without
srandom), and the potential security exposure from a
less-random-than-expected seed seems minimal in any case.
- Avoid integer overflow when the sum of LIMIT and OFFSET values
exceeds 2^63.
- Add overflow checks to int4 and int8 versions of generate_series().
- Fix trailing-zero removal in to_char(). In a format with FM and no
digit positions after the decimal point, zeroes to the left of the
decimal point could be removed incorrectly.
- Fix pg_size_pretty() to avoid overflow for inputs close to 2^63.
- Weaken plpgsql's check for typmod matching in record values.
An overly enthusiastic check could lead to discarding length
modifiers that should have been kept.
- Fix pg_upgrade to preserve toast tables' relfrozenxids during an
upgrade from 8.3. Failure to do this could lead to "pg_clog" files
being removed too soon after the upgrade.
- Fix psql's counting of script file line numbers during COPY from a
different file.
- Fix pg_restore's direct-to-database mode for
standard_conforming_strings. pg_restore could emit incorrect commands
when restoring directly to a database server from an archive file that
had been made with standard_conforming_strings set to on.
- Be more user-friendly about unsupported cases for parallel
pg_restore. This change ensures that such cases are detected and
reported before any restore actions have been taken.
- Fix write-past-buffer-end and memory leak in libpq's LDAP service
lookup code.
- In libpq, avoid failures when using nonblocking I/O and an SSL
connection.
- Improve libpq's handling of failures during connection startup.
In particular, the response to a server report of fork() failure
during SSL connection startup is now saner.
- Improve libpq's error reporting for SSL failures.
- Fix PQsetvalue() to avoid possible crash when adding a new tuple to
a PGresult originally obtained from a server query.
- Make ecpglib write double values with 15 digits precision.
- In ecpglib, be sure LC_NUMERIC setting is restored after an error.
- Apply upstream fix for blowfish signed-character bug
(CVE-2011-2483) (Closes: #631285)
"contrib/pg_crypto"'s blowfish encryption code could give wrong
results on platforms where char is signed (which is most), leading
to encrypted passwords being weaker than they should be.
- Fix memory leak in "contrib/seg".
- Fix pgstatindex() to give consistent results for empty indexes.
- Allow building with perl 5.14. (Closes: #628503)
-- Martin Pitt <email address hidden> Tue, 04 Oct 2011 12:00:41 +0200
-
postgresql-8.4 (8.4.8-0ubuntu0.11.04) natty; urgency=low
* New upstream bug fix release: (LP: #767165)
- If your installation was upgraded from a previous major release by
running pg_upgrade, you should take action to prevent possible data loss
due to a now-fixed bug in pg_upgrade. The recommended solution is to run
"VACUUM FREEZE" on all TOAST tables. More information is available at
http://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/20110408pg_upgrade_fix.
- Fix pg_upgrade's handling of TOAST tables.
This error poses a significant risk of data loss for installations
that have been upgraded with pg_upgrade. This patch corrects the
problem for future uses of pg_upgrade, but does not in itself cure
the issue in installations that have been processed with a buggy
version of pg_upgrade.
- Suppress incorrect "PD_ALL_VISIBLE flag was incorrectly set"
warning.
- Disallow including a composite type in itself.
- Avoid potential deadlock during catalog cache initialization.
- Fix dangling-pointer problem in BEFORE ROW UPDATE trigger handling
when there was a concurrent update to the target tuple.
- Disallow "DROP TABLE" when there are pending deferred trigger
events for the table.
Formerly the "DROP" would go through, leading to "could not open
relation with OID nnn" errors when the triggers were eventually
fired.
- Prevent crash triggered by constant-false WHERE conditions during
GEQO optimization.
- Improve planner's handling of semi-join and anti-join cases.
- Fix selectivity estimation for text search to account for NULLs.
- Improve PL/pgSQL's ability to handle row types with dropped columns.
- Fix PL/Python memory leak involving array slices.
- Fix pg_restore to cope with long lines (over 1KB) in TOC files.
- Put in more safeguards against crashing due to division-by-zero
with overly enthusiastic compiler optimization. (Closes: #616180)
-- Martin Pitt <email address hidden> Wed, 20 Apr 2011 16:10:45 +0200
-
postgresql-8.4 (8.4.7-1ubuntu1) natty; urgency=low
* Fix definition of bool on ppc64.
-- Matthias Klose <email address hidden> Tue, 15 Mar 2011 21:00:08 +0100
-
postgresql-8.4 (8.4.7-1) unstable; urgency=low
* New upstream security/bug fix release:
- Fix buffer overrun in "contrib/intarray"'s input function for the
query_int type.
This bug is a security risk since the function's return address
could be overwritten. Thanks to Apple Inc's security team for
reporting this issue and supplying the fix. (CVE-2010-4015)
- Avoid failures when "EXPLAIN" tries to display a simple-form CASE
expression.
If the CASE's test expression was a constant, the planner could
simplify the CASE into a form that confused the expression-display
code, resulting in "unexpected CASE WHEN clause" errors.
- Fix assignment to an array slice that is before the existing range
of subscripts.
If there was a gap between the newly added subscripts and the first
pre-existing subscript, the code miscalculated how many entries
needed to be copied from the old array's null bitmap, potentially
leading to data corruption or crash.
- Avoid unexpected conversion overflow in planner for very distant
date values.
The date type supports a wider range of dates than can be
represented by the timestamp types, but the planner assumed it
could always convert a date to timestamp with impunity.
- Fix pg_restore's text output for large objects (BLOBs) when
standard_conforming_strings is on.
Although restoring directly to a database worked correctly, string
escaping was incorrect if pg_restore was asked for SQL text output
and standard_conforming_strings had been enabled in the source
database.
- Fix erroneous parsing of tsquery values containing ... &
!(subexpression) | ... .
Queries containing this combination of operators were not executed
correctly. The same error existed in "contrib/intarray"'s query_int
type and "contrib/ltree"'s ltxtquery type.
- Fix bug in "contrib/seg"'s GiST picksplit algorithm.
This could result in considerable inefficiency, though not actually
incorrect answers, in a GiST index on a seg column. If you have
such an index, consider "REINDEX"ing it after installing this
update. (This is identical to the bug that was fixed in
"contrib/cube" in the previous update.)
-- Martin Pitt <email address hidden> Thu, 03 Feb 2011 18:29:02 +0000
-
postgresql-8.4 (8.4.6-1) unstable; urgency=low
* New upstream bug fix release:
- Force the default wal_sync_method to be fdatasync on Linux.
The default on Linux has actually been fdatasync for many years,
but recent kernel changes caused PostgreSQL to choose open_datasync
instead. This choice did not result in any performance improvement,
and caused outright failures on certain filesystems, notably ext4
with the data=journal mount option.
- Fix assorted bugs in WAL replay logic for GIN indexes.
This could result in "bad buffer id: 0" failures or corruption of
index contents during replication.
- Fix recovery from base backup when the starting checkpoint WAL
record is not in the same WAL segment as its redo point.
- Fix persistent slowdown of autovacuum workers when multiple workers
remain active for a long time.
The effective vacuum_cost_limit for an autovacuum worker could drop
to nearly zero if it processed enough tables, causing it to run
extremely slowly.
- Add support for detecting register-stack overrun on IA64.
The IA64 architecture has two hardware stacks. Full prevention of
stack-overrun failures requires checking both.
- Add a check for stack overflow in copyObject().
Certain code paths could crash due to stack overflow given a
sufficiently complex query.
- Fix detection of page splits in temporary GiST indexes.
It is possible to have a "concurrent" page split in a temporary
index, if for example there is an open cursor scanning the index
when an insertion is done. GiST failed to detect this case and
hence could deliver wrong results when execution of the cursor
continued.
- Fix error checking during early connection processing.
The check for too many child processes was skipped in some cases,
possibly leading to postmaster crash when attempting to add the new
child process to fixed-size arrays.
- Improve efficiency of window functions.
Certain cases where a large number of tuples needed to be read in
advance, but work_mem was large enough to allow them all to be held
in memory, were unexpectedly slow. percent_rank(), cume_dist() and
ntile() in particular were subject to this problem.
- Avoid memory leakage while "ANALYZE"'ing complex index expressions.
- Ensure an index that uses a whole-row Var still depends on its
table.
An index declared like create index i on t (foo(t.-)) would not
automatically get dropped when its table was dropped.
- Do not "inline" a SQL function with multiple OUT parameters.
This avoids a possible crash due to loss of information about the
expected result rowtype.
- Behave correctly if ORDER BY, LIMIT, FOR UPDATE, or WITH is
attached to the VALUES part of INSERT ... VALUES.
- Fix constant-folding of COALESCE() expressions.
The planner would sometimes attempt to evaluate sub-expressions
that in fact could never be reached, possibly leading to unexpected
errors.
- Fix postmaster crash when connection acceptance (accept() or one of
the calls made immediately after it) fails, and the postmaster was
compiled with GSSAPI support.
- Fix missed unlink of temporary files when log_temp_files is active.
If an error occurred while attempting to emit the log message, the
unlink was not done, resulting in accumulation of temp files.
- Add print functionality for InhRelation nodes.
This avoids a failure when debug_print_parse is enabled and certain
types of query are executed.
- Fix incorrect calculation of distance from a point to a horizontal
line segment.
This bug affected several different geometric distance-measurement
operators.
- Fix incorrect calculation of transaction status in ecpg.
- Fix PL/pgSQL's handling of "simple" expressions to not fail in
recursion or error-recovery cases.
- Fix PL/Python's handling of set-returning functions.
Attempts to call SPI functions within the iterator generating a set
result would fail.
- Fix bug in "contrib/cube"'s GiST picksplit algorithm.
This could result in considerable inefficiency, though not actually
incorrect answers, in a GiST index on a cube column. If you have
such an index, consider "REINDEX"ing it after installing this
update.
- Don't emit "identifier will be truncated" notices in
"contrib/dblink" except when creating new connections.
- Fix potential coredump on missing public key in "contrib/pgcrypto".
- Fix memory leak in "contrib/xml2"'s XPath query functions.
-- Ubuntu Archive Auto-Sync <email address hidden> Sun, 19 Dec 2010 11:56:51 +0000
-
postgresql-8.4 (8.4.5-2build1) natty; urgency=low
* Rebuild with python 2.7 as the python default.
-- Matthias Klose <email address hidden> Thu, 09 Dec 2010 16:53:48 +0000
-
postgresql-8.4 (8.4.5-2) unstable; urgency=low
* debian/control: Build against libedit instead of libreadline. We can't
simultaneously link against readline (GPL) and libssl (incompatible with
GPL). (Closes: #603598)
-- Ubuntu Archive Auto-Sync <email address hidden> Thu, 18 Nov 2010 11:03:36 +0000
-
postgresql-8.4 (8.4.5-1) unstable; urgency=medium
* Urgency medium, since this fixes a security bug (but also a lot of other
bugs, it's not a pinpointed patch).
* New upstream security/bug fix update:
- Use a separate interpreter for each calling SQL userid in PL/Perl
and PL/Tcl.
This change prevents security problems that can be caused by
subverting Perl or Tcl code that will be executed later in the same
session under another SQL user identity (for example, within a
SECURITY DEFINER function). Most scripting languages offer numerous
ways that that might be done, such as redefining standard functions
or operators called by the target function. Without this change,
any SQL user with Perl or Tcl language usage rights can do
essentially anything with the SQL privileges of the target
function's owner.
The cost of this change is that intentional communication among
Perl and Tcl functions becomes more difficult. To provide an escape
hatch, PL/PerlU and PL/TclU functions continue to use only one
interpreter per session. This is not considered a security issue
since all such functions execute at the trust level of a database
superuser already.
It is likely that third-party procedural languages that claim to
offer trusted execution have similar security issues. We advise
contacting the authors of any PL you are depending on for
security-critical purposes.
Our thanks to Tim Bunce for pointing out this issue
(CVE-2010-3433).
- Prevent possible crashes in pg_get_expr() by disallowing it from
being called with an argument that is not one of the system catalog
columns it's intended to be used with.
- Fix incorrect placement of placeholder evaluation.
This bug could result in query outputs being non-null when they
should be null, in cases where the inner side of an outer join is a
sub-select with non-strict expressions in its output list.
- Fix possible duplicate scans of UNION ALL member relations.
- Fix "cannot handle unplanned sub-select" error.
This occurred when a sub-select contains a join alias reference
that expands into an expression containing another sub-select.
- Fix mishandling of whole-row Vars that reference a view or
sub-select and appear within a nested sub-select.
- Fix mishandling of cross-type IN comparisons.
This could result in failures if the planner tried to implement an
IN join with a sort-then-unique-then-plain-join plan.
- Fix computation of "ANALYZE" statistics for tsvector columns.
The original coding could produce incorrect statistics, leading to
poor plan choices later.
- Improve planner's estimate of memory used by array_agg(),
string_agg(), and similar aggregate functions.
The previous drastic underestimate could lead to out-of-memory
failures due to inappropriate choice of a hash-aggregation plan.
- Fix failure to mark cached plans as transient.
If a plan is prepared while "CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY" is in
progress for one of the referenced tables, it is supposed to be
re-planned once the index is ready for use. This was not happening
reliably.
- Reduce PANIC to ERROR in some occasionally-reported btree failure
cases, and provide additional detail in the resulting error
messages.
This should improve the system's robustness with corrupted indexes.
- Fix incorrect search logic for partial-match queries with GIN
indexes.
Cases involving AND/OR combination of several GIN index conditions
didn't always give the right answer, and were sometimes much slower
than necessary.
- Prevent show_session_authorization() from crashing within
autovacuum processes.
- Defend against functions returning setof record where not all the
returned rows are actually of the same rowtype.
- Fix possible corruption of pending trigger event lists during
subtransaction rollback.
This could lead to a crash or incorrect firing of triggers.
- Fix possible failure when hashing a pass-by-reference function
result.
- Improve merge join's handling of NULLs in the join columns.
A merge join can now stop entirely upon reaching the first NULL, if
the sort order is such that NULLs sort high.
- Take care to fsync the contents of lockfiles (both "postmaster.pid"
and the socket lockfile) while writing them.
This omission could result in corrupted lockfile contents if the
machine crashes shortly after postmaster start. That could in turn
prevent subsequent attempts to start the postmaster from
succeeding, until the lockfile is manually removed.
- Avoid recursion while assigning XIDs to heavily-nested
subtransactions.
The original coding could result in a crash if there was limited
stack space.
- Avoid holding open old WAL segments in the walwriter process.
The previous coding would prevent removal of no-longer-needed
segments.
- Fix log_line_prefix's %i escape, which could produce junk early in
backend startup.
- Prevent misinterpretation of partially-specified relation options
for TOAST tables.
In particular, fillfactor would be read as zero if any other
reloption had been set for the table, leading to serious bloat.
- Fix inheritance count tracking in "ALTER TABLE ... ADD CONSTRAINT"
- Fix possible data corruption in "ALTER TABLE ... SET TABLESPACE"
when archiving is enabled.
- Allow "CREATE DATABASE" and "ALTER DATABASE ... SET TABLESPACE" to
be interrupted by query-cancel.
- Improve "CREATE INDEX"'s checking of whether proposed index
expressions are immutable.
- Fix "REASSIGN OWNED" to handle operator classes and families.
- Fix possible core dump when comparing two empty tsquery values.
- Fix LIKE's handling of patterns containing % followed by _.
We've fixed this before, but there were still some
incorrectly-handled cases.
- Re-allow input of Julian dates prior to 0001-01-01 AD.
Input such as 'J100000'::date worked before 8.4, but was
unintentionally broken by added error-checking.
- Fix PL/pgSQL to throw an error, not crash, if a cursor is closed
within a FOR loop that is iterating over that cursor.
- In PL/Python, defend against null pointer results from
PyCObject_AsVoidPtr and PyCObject_FromVoidPtr.
- In libpq, fix full SSL certificate verification for the case where
both host and hostaddr are specified.
- Make psql recognize "DISCARD ALL" as a command that should not be
encased in a transaction block in autocommit-off mode.
- Fix some issues in pg_dump's handling of SQL/MED objects.
Notably, pg_dump would always fail if run by a non-superuser, which
was not intended.
- Improve pg_dump and pg_restore's handling of non-seekable archive
files.
This is important for proper functioning of parallel restore.
- Improve parallel pg_restore's ability to cope with selective
restore (-L option).
The original code tended to fail if the -L file commanded a
non-default restore ordering.
- Fix ecpg to process data from RETURNING clauses correctly.
- Fix some memory leaks in ecpg.
- Improve "contrib/dblink"'s handling of tables containing dropped
columns.
- Fix connection leak after "duplicate connection name" errors in
"contrib/dblink".
- Fix "contrib/dblink" to handle connection names longer than 62
bytes correctly.
- Add hstore(text, text) function to "contrib/hstore".
This function is the recommended substitute for the now-deprecated
=> operator. It was back-patched so that future-proofed code can be
used with older server versions. Note that the patch will be
effective only after "contrib/hstore" is installed or reinstalled
in a particular database. Users might prefer to execute the "CREATE
FUNCTION" command by hand, instead.
- Update build infrastructure and documentation to reflect the source
code repository's move from CVS to Git.
* debian/postgresql-8.4.preinst: Add missing debhelper token.
* debian/control: Bump Standards-Version to 3.9.1 (no changes necessary).
-- Martin Pitt <email address hidden> Fri, 15 Oct 2010 06:59:14 +0000
-
postgresql-8.4 (8.4.5-0ubuntu10.10) maverick-security; urgency=medium
* New upstream security/bug fix update: (LP: #655293)
- Use a separate interpreter for each calling SQL userid in PL/Perl
and PL/Tcl.
This change prevents security problems that can be caused by
subverting Perl or Tcl code that will be executed later in the same
session under another SQL user identity (for example, within a
SECURITY DEFINER function). Most scripting languages offer numerous
ways that that might be done, such as redefining standard functions
or operators called by the target function. Without this change,
any SQL user with Perl or Tcl language usage rights can do
essentially anything with the SQL privileges of the target
function's owner.
The cost of this change is that intentional communication among
Perl and Tcl functions becomes more difficult. To provide an escape
hatch, PL/PerlU and PL/TclU functions continue to use only one
interpreter per session. This is not considered a security issue
since all such functions execute at the trust level of a database
superuser already.
It is likely that third-party procedural languages that claim to
offer trusted execution have similar security issues. We advise
contacting the authors of any PL you are depending on for
security-critical purposes.
Our thanks to Tim Bunce for pointing out this issue
(CVE-2010-3433).
- Prevent possible crashes in pg_get_expr() by disallowing it from
being called with an argument that is not one of the system catalog
columns it's intended to be used with.
- Fix incorrect placement of placeholder evaluation.
This bug could result in query outputs being non-null when they
should be null, in cases where the inner side of an outer join is a
sub-select with non-strict expressions in its output list.
- Fix possible duplicate scans of UNION ALL member relations.
- Fix "cannot handle unplanned sub-select" error.
This occurred when a sub-select contains a join alias reference
that expands into an expression containing another sub-select.
- Fix mishandling of whole-row Vars that reference a view or
sub-select and appear within a nested sub-select.
- Fix mishandling of cross-type IN comparisons.
This could result in failures if the planner tried to implement an
IN join with a sort-then-unique-then-plain-join plan.
- Fix computation of "ANALYZE" statistics for tsvector columns.
The original coding could produce incorrect statistics, leading to
poor plan choices later.
- Improve planner's estimate of memory used by array_agg(),
string_agg(), and similar aggregate functions.
The previous drastic underestimate could lead to out-of-memory
failures due to inappropriate choice of a hash-aggregation plan.
- Fix failure to mark cached plans as transient.
If a plan is prepared while "CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY" is in
progress for one of the referenced tables, it is supposed to be
re-planned once the index is ready for use. This was not happening
reliably.
- Reduce PANIC to ERROR in some occasionally-reported btree failure
cases, and provide additional detail in the resulting error
messages.
This should improve the system's robustness with corrupted indexes.
- Fix incorrect search logic for partial-match queries with GIN
indexes.
Cases involving AND/OR combination of several GIN index conditions
didn't always give the right answer, and were sometimes much slower
than necessary.
- Prevent show_session_authorization() from crashing within
autovacuum processes.
- Defend against functions returning setof record where not all the
returned rows are actually of the same rowtype.
- Fix possible corruption of pending trigger event lists during
subtransaction rollback.
This could lead to a crash or incorrect firing of triggers.
- Fix possible failure when hashing a pass-by-reference function
result.
- Improve merge join's handling of NULLs in the join columns.
A merge join can now stop entirely upon reaching the first NULL, if
the sort order is such that NULLs sort high.
- Take care to fsync the contents of lockfiles (both "postmaster.pid"
and the socket lockfile) while writing them.
This omission could result in corrupted lockfile contents if the
machine crashes shortly after postmaster start. That could in turn
prevent subsequent attempts to start the postmaster from
succeeding, until the lockfile is manually removed.
- Avoid recursion while assigning XIDs to heavily-nested
subtransactions.
The original coding could result in a crash if there was limited
stack space.
- Avoid holding open old WAL segments in the walwriter process.
The previous coding would prevent removal of no-longer-needed
segments.
- Fix log_line_prefix's %i escape, which could produce junk early in
backend startup.
- Prevent misinterpretation of partially-specified relation options
for TOAST tables.
In particular, fillfactor would be read as zero if any other
reloption had been set for the table, leading to serious bloat.
- Fix inheritance count tracking in "ALTER TABLE ... ADD CONSTRAINT"
- Fix possible data corruption in "ALTER TABLE ... SET TABLESPACE"
when archiving is enabled.
- Allow "CREATE DATABASE" and "ALTER DATABASE ... SET TABLESPACE" to
be interrupted by query-cancel.
- Improve "CREATE INDEX"'s checking of whether proposed index
expressions are immutable.
- Fix "REASSIGN OWNED" to handle operator classes and families.
- Fix possible core dump when comparing two empty tsquery values.
- Fix LIKE's handling of patterns containing % followed by _.
We've fixed this before, but there were still some
incorrectly-handled cases.
- Re-allow input of Julian dates prior to 0001-01-01 AD.
Input such as 'J100000'::date worked before 8.4, but was
unintentionally broken by added error-checking.
- Fix PL/pgSQL to throw an error, not crash, if a cursor is closed
within a FOR loop that is iterating over that cursor.
- In PL/Python, defend against null pointer results from
PyCObject_AsVoidPtr and PyCObject_FromVoidPtr.
- In libpq, fix full SSL certificate verification for the case where
both host and hostaddr are specified.
- Make psql recognize "DISCARD ALL" as a command that should not be
encased in a transaction block in autocommit-off mode.
- Fix some issues in pg_dump's handling of SQL/MED objects.
Notably, pg_dump would always fail if run by a non-superuser, which
was not intended.
- Improve pg_dump and pg_restore's handling of non-seekable archive
files.
This is important for proper functioning of parallel restore.
- Improve parallel pg_restore's ability to cope with selective
restore (-L option).
The original code tended to fail if the -L file commanded a
non-default restore ordering.
- Fix ecpg to process data from RETURNING clauses correctly.
- Fix some memory leaks in ecpg.
- Improve "contrib/dblink"'s handling of tables containing dropped
columns.
- Fix connection leak after "duplicate connection name" errors in
"contrib/dblink".
- Fix "contrib/dblink" to handle connection names longer than 62
bytes correctly.
- Add hstore(text, text) function to "contrib/hstore".
This function is the recommended substitute for the now-deprecated
=> operator. It was back-patched so that future-proofed code can be
used with older server versions. Note that the patch will be
effective only after "contrib/hstore" is installed or reinstalled
in a particular database. Users might prefer to execute the "CREATE
FUNCTION" command by hand, instead.
- Update build infrastructure and documentation to reflect the source
code repository's move from CVS to Git.
* debian/postgresql-8.4.preinst: Add missing debhelper token.
* debian/control: Bump Standards-Version to 3.9.1 (no changes necessary).
-- Martin Pitt <email address hidden> Tue, 05 Oct 2010 20:41:08 +0200
-
postgresql-8.4 (8.4.4-2) unstable; urgency=low
* Migrate to a common init script for all server versions, to avoid
providing the "postgresql" service in multiple packages (which causes
insserv to complain bitterly):
- Drop debian/postgresql-8.4.init.
- debian/control: Bump dependency to postgresql-common to ensure we have a
common /etc/init.d/postgresql init script.
- debian/postgresql-8.4.preinst: Remove/rename our init script on upgrade.
- debian/postgresql-8.4.prerm: Call stop_version on upgrade.
- debian/rules: Drop dh_installinit arguments.
- (Closes: #585890)
-- Martin Pitt <email address hidden> Mon, 19 Jul 2010 23:29:03 +0200