Since Postgres commit da9b580d files and directories are supposed to
be created with pg_file_create_mode and pg_dir_create_mode permissions
when default permissions are expected.
This fixes a failure of one of the postgres tests:
If we create file add.conf containing
```
shared_preload_libraries='citus'
```
and run postgres tests
```
TEMP_CONFIG=/path/to/add.conf make installcheck -C src/bin/pg_ctl/
```
then 001_start_stop.pl fails with
```
.../data/base/pgsql_job_cache mode must be 0750
```
in the log.
In passing this also stops creating directories that we haven't used
since Citus 7.4
This change explicitely doesn't change permissions of certificates/keys
that we create.
---------
Co-authored-by: Karina Litskevich <litskevichkarina@gmail.com>
This change adds a script to programatically group all includes in a
specific order. The script was used as a one time invocation to group
and sort all includes throught our formatted code. The grouping is as
follows:
- System includes (eg. `#include<...>`)
- Postgres.h (eg. `#include "postgres.h"`)
- Toplevel imports from postgres, not contained in a directory (eg.
`#include "miscadmin.h"`)
- General postgres includes (eg . `#include "nodes/..."`)
- Toplevel citus includes, not contained in a directory (eg. `#include
"citus_verion.h"`)
- Columnar includes (eg. `#include "columnar/..."`)
- Distributed includes (eg. `#include "distributed/..."`)
Because it is quite hard to understand the difference between toplevel
citus includes and toplevel postgres includes it hardcodes the list of
toplevel citus includes. In the same manner it assumes anything not
prefixed with `columnar/` or `distributed/` as a postgres include.
The sorting/grouping is enforced by CI. Since we do so with our own
script there are not changes required in our uncrustify configuration.