Thread
Commits
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Fix limitations on what SQL commands can be issued to a walsender.
- 6aa5186146f1 15.0 landed
- d67354d870bb 13.6 landed
- 9af6d4b5a588 10.20 landed
- 689f75d6eb9a 12.10 landed
- 4ec54498c5ea 11.15 landed
- 1efcc5946d59 14.2 landed
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Remember to reset yy_start state when firing up repl_scanner.l.
- ef9706bbc8ce 14.2 landed
- daf658982889 10.20 landed
- c94c6612da57 13.6 landed
- a8ce5c8d7888 12.10 landed
- 449a696236ff 11.15 landed
- 3c06ec6d1412 15.0 landed
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BUG #17379: Cannot issue multi-command statements using a replication connection
The Post Office <noreply@postgresql.org> — 2022-01-24T01:10:49Z
The following bug has been logged on the website: Bug reference: 17379 Logged by: Greg Rychlewski Email address: greg.rychlewski@gmail.com PostgreSQL version: 13.5 Operating system: Mac OS Description: When I issue the following multi-command query on a replication connection I receive a syntax error: $psql "dbname=postgres replication=database" -c "select 1;select 2;" ERROR: syntax error I was curious why this happens, given the documentation at [1] states "In either physical replication or logical replication walsender mode, only the simple query protocol can be used." For comparison, the following query returns the expected result: $psql "dbname=postgres replication=database" -c "select 1;" ?column? ---------- 1 [1] https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/protocol-replication.html -
Re: BUG #17379: Cannot issue multi-command statements using a replication connection
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2022-01-24T14:52:32Z
PG Bug reporting form <noreply@postgresql.org> writes: > When I issue the following multi-command query on a replication connection I > receive a syntax error: > $psql "dbname=postgres replication=database" -c "select 1;select 2;" > ERROR: syntax error As I mentioned on the pgsql-novice thread, I think the proximate cause of this is that repl_gram.y's make_sqlcmd() tries to skip to the end of the SQL statement, but for some reason it is coded to stop at a semicolon. It needs to eat the whole rest of the string, unconditionally. It gets worse though. repl_scanner.l is not built to lex everything the core scanner can (and I don't think we want to require it to). But this approach to consuming non-replication commands requires it to be able to do so. It's not very hard to find cases that break it, for example $ psql "dbname=postgres replication=database" psql (15devel) Type "help" for help. postgres=# select $x$ " $x$; ERROR: unterminated quoted string Of course that happens because repl_scanner.l doesn't know about dollar-quoting, so it tries to process the ", which it mis-recognizes as the start of a quoted string. We probably want to shut down the lexer as soon as we realize it's a non-replication command, instead of asking it to lex to the end of the string. Still worse, if you repeat that a few times, you find the behavior is unstable: postgres=# select $x$ " $x$; ?column? ---------- " (1 row) postgres=# select $x$ " $x$; ERROR: unterminated quoted string postgres=# select $x$ " $x$; ?column? ---------- " (1 row) postgres=# select $x$ " $x$; ERROR: unterminated quoted string I've not traced the reason for that in detail, but I bet it is because there is static state in repl_scanner.l that doesn't get cleaned up after elog(ERROR). Oh, and another thing: postgres=# /* foo */ select 42; ERROR: syntax error Presuming that all SQL statements start with a keyword has its problems. This sort of half-baked implementation was probably fine when the replication protocol was first designed, but if we're going to claim that clients can issue arbitrary SQL, it needs upgrading. regards, tom lane
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Re: BUG #17379: Cannot issue multi-command statements using a replication connection
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2022-01-24T19:00:11Z
I wrote: > [ assorted whining about replication-command lexing ] The business with unstable results turned out to be due to failure to reset the lexer's start state, so that's a one-line fix that I already pushed. Attached is the patch I propose to fix the rest of it. The core of this is deciding that we cannot try to run repl_scanner.l over the whole input string when it is not a replication command. That's just going to leave us chasing a moving target of what it has to know to lex successfully. If it were designed to never have any lexer failure conditions, maybe this could be made to work, but that ship already sailed. Hence, what this does is to lex just the first token, see if that's one of the replication-command keywords, and if so push it back so that repl_gram.y will succeed. If not, we just punt immediately without examining any more of the string. This gets rid of all of the other failure conditions discussed, and allows deletion of nearly as much code as it adds. Notably, we don't need the SQLCmd node type anymore, since repl_gram.y will never be asked to look at a general SQL command. Note: I put the switch() recognizing command-starting keywords into repl_scanner.l. I'd tried to put it in walsender.c, which seemed like a more natural place, but the keyword token names aren't currently exported outside repl_gram.y + repl_scanner.l. Moving them to a header file seems like way more work than is justified. You'd have to touch repl_scanner.l anyway while adding a new command keyword, so this arrangement isn't terribly awful. I also failed to resist the temptation to clean up some poor style in repl_scanner.l, as well as bad decisions like not having the same idea of what's whitespace as the core lexer does. The part about removing the SQLCmd node type can't be back-patched (since we can't renumber enum NodeTag in stable branches), but I don't see any reason the rest of this can't be. regards, tom lane