That way connections can be automatically closed after errors and such,
and the connection management infrastructure gets wider testing. It
also fixes a few issues around connection string building.
This includes basic infrastructure for logging of commands sent to
remote/worker nodes. Note that this has no effect as of yet, since no
callers are converted to the new infrastructure.
Connections are tracked and released by integrating into postgres'
transaction handling. That allows to to use connections without having
to resort to having to disable interrupts or using PG_TRY/CATCH blocks
to avoid leaking connections.
This is intended to eventually replace multi_client_executor.c and
connection_cache.c, and to provide the basis of a centralized
transaction management.
The newly introduced transaction hook should, in the future, be the only
one in citus, to allow for proper ordering between operations. For now
this central handler is responsible for releasing connections and
resetting XactModificationLevel after a transaction.
Adds an --enable-coverage configure option which provides the necessary
flags for coverage instrumentation. A new tools branch uses this flag
during all builds. Coverage reports are uploaded to codecov.io, where
they are publicly visible.
On some systems a new libpq is available than what we're compiling
against, but until now we used psql in the version we're compiling
against. That' a problem, because (quoting Jason):
With 9.6, libpq's default handling of CONTEXT changed: it is hidden
unless the level is ERROR or higher. We addressed this ourselves using
the SHOW_CONTEXT variable (by setting "always" in pg_regress_multi): in
9.5, this is ignored (and unneeded), in 9.6, it ensures old behavior is
preserved.
For 9.6 we'd already worked around the problem by specifying that
context should always be shown, but < 9.6 psql doesn't know how to do
that.
As there's no csql anymore, which strictly tied us to a specific version
of psql/csql, we can now just use the system's psql if available. We
still fall back to the psql of the installation we're compiling against,
if there's no other psql in PATH.
This commit fixes a bug when the SELECT target list includes a constant
value.
Previous behaviour of target list re-ordering:
* Iterate over the INSERT target list
* If it includes a Var, find the corresponding SELECT entry
and update its resno accordingly
* If it does not include a Var (which we only considered to be
DEFAULTs), generate a new SELECT target entry
* If the processed target entry count in SELECT target list is less
than the original SELECT target list (GROUP BY elements not included in
the SELECT target entry), add them in the SELECT target list and
update the resnos accordingly.
* However, this step was leading to add the CONST SELECT target entries
twice. The reason is that when CONST target list entries appear in the
SELECT target list, the INSERT target list doesn't include a Var. Instead,
it includes CONST as it does for DEFAULTs.
New behaviour of target list re-ordering:
* Iterate over the INSERT target list
* If it includes a Var, find the corresponding SELECT entry
and update its resno accordingly
* If it does not include a Var (which we consider to be
DEFAULTs and CONSTs on the SELECT), generate a new SELECT
target entry
* If any target entry remains on the SELECT target list which are resjunk,
(GROUP BY elements not included in the SELECT target entry), keep them
in the SELECT target list by updating the resnos.
While creating a colocated table, we don't want the source table to be dropped.
However, using a ShareLock blocks DML statements on the source table, and
using AccessShareLock is enough to prevent DROP. Therefore, we just loosened
the lock to AccessShareLock.
This change allows seeing the names of columns of `master_add_node`,
using `SELECT * FROM master_add_node(...)` by specifying output
columns in UDF definition.
Previously, we threw an error when we ran CREATE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS
with an already existing index. This change enables expected behavior by
checking if the statement has IF NOT EXISTS before throwing the error.
We also ensure that we don't execute the command on the workers, if an
index already exists on the master.
At the moment, we do not support foreign constraints if replication factor is greater
than 1. However foreign constraints can be used in cloud with high availability option.
Therefore we do not want to create an impression such that foreign constraints with
high availability is not supported at all. We call users to action with this error
message.