Thread
Commits
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Prevent dangling-pointer access when update trigger returns old tuple.
- 25b692568f42 11.0 landed
- b45f821e2226 10.4 landed
- 9bc33ef5ece9 9.3.23 landed
- 5ccb77586955 9.4.18 landed
- 2ee44e10d44b 9.5.13 landed
- 06f47297e2b0 9.6.9 landed
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Improve regression test coverage of regress.c.
- be42eb9d624c 11.0 landed
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Remove unused functions in regress.c.
- db3af9feb19f 11.0 landed
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Make plpgsql use its DTYPE_REC code paths for composite-type variables.
- 4b93f57999a2 11.0 cited
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This is part #1 for of the DEFERRED CONSTRAINT TRIGGER support.
- 1547ee017c89 7.1.1 cited
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invalid memory alloc request size error with commit 4b93f579
Rushabh Lathia <rushabh.lathia@gmail.com> — 2018-02-26T07:14:32Z
Hi, With commit 4b93f57999a2ca9b9c9e573ea32ab1aeaa8bf496, which plpgsql use its DTYPE_REC code paths for composite-type variables - below test started failing with "invalid memory alloc request size 2139062167 <%28213%29%20906-2167>" error. Testcase: create table foo ( name varchar(20), type varchar(20)); insert into foo values ( 'Ford', 'Car'); CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION Trigger_Function() returns trigger as $$ BEGIN RAISE NOTICE 'OLD: %, NEW: %', OLD, NEW; IF NEW.name = 'Ford' THEN return OLD; -- return old tuple END IF; return NEW; -- return original tuple END; $$ language plpgsql; CREATE TRIGGER Before_Update_Trigger BEFORE UPDATE ON foo FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE PROCEDURE Trigger_Function(); UPDATE foo SET type = 'New Car' where name = 'Ford'; Error coming while trying to copy the invalid tuple from (heap_copytuple() <- ExecCopySlotTuple() <- ExecMaterializeSlot() <- ExecUpdate() <- ExecModifyTable()) Here ExecBRUpdateTriggers() returns the invalid tuple when trigger return old tuple. Looking further I found that tuple is getting free at ExecBRUpdateTriggers(), below code: if (trigtuple != fdw_trigtuple) heap_freetuple(trigtuple); It seems like before commit 4b93f57999a2ca9b9c9e573ea32ab1aeaa8bf496, plpgsql_exec_trigger() always used to copy the old and new tuple but after that commit it doen't copy the "old" and "new" tuple if if user just did "return new" or "return old" without changing anything. With commit 4b93f57999a2ca9b9c9e573ea32ab1aeaa8bf496, which plpgsql use its DTYPE_REC code paths for composite-type variables - below test started failing with "invalid memory alloc request size 2139062167" error. Testcase: create table foo ( name varchar(20), type varchar(20)); insert into foo values ( 'Ford', 'Car'); CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION Trigger_Function() returns trigger as $$ BEGIN RAISE NOTICE 'OLD: %, NEW: %', OLD, NEW; IF NEW.name = 'Ford' THEN return OLD; -- return old tuple END IF; return NEW; -- return original tuple END; $$ language plpgsql; CREATE TRIGGER Before_Update_Trigger BEFORE UPDATE ON foo FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE PROCEDURE Trigger_Function(); UPDATE foo SET type = 'New Car' where name = 'Ford'; Error coming while trying to copy the invalid tuple from (heap_copytuple() <- ExecCopySlotTuple() <- ExecMaterializeSlot() <- ExecUpdate() <- ExecModifyTable()) Here ExecBRUpdateTriggers() returns the invalid tuple when trigger return old tuple. Looking further I found that tuple is getting free at ExecBRUpdateTriggers(), below code: if (trigtuple != fdw_trigtuple) heap_freetuple(trigtuple); It seems like before commit 4b93f57999a2ca9b9c9e573ea32ab1aeaa8bf496, plpgsql_exec_trigger() always used to copy the old and new tuple but after that commit it doen't copy the "old" and "new" tuple if if user just did "return new" or "return old" without changing anything. + /* + * Copy tuple to upper executor memory. But if user just did + * "return new" or "return old" without changing anything, there's + * no need to copy; we can return the original tuple (which will + * save a few cycles in trigger.c as well as here). + */ + if (rettup != trigdata->tg_newtuple && + rettup != trigdata->tg_trigtuple) + rettup = SPI_copytuple(rettup); In ExecBRUpdateTriggers(), we need to add a check that if trigtuple is same as newtuple, then we don't require to free the trigtuple. ExecBRDeleteTriggers() also does the similar things, but their we don't need a check because it doesn't care about the return tuple. PFA patch which add a check to not free the trigtuple if newtuple is same as trigtuple and also added the related testcase. Thanks, Rushabh Lathia www.EnterpriseDB.com -
Re: invalid memory alloc request size error with commit 4b93f579
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2018-02-26T19:52:06Z
Rushabh Lathia <rushabh.lathia@gmail.com> writes: > In ExecBRUpdateTriggers(), we need to add a check that if trigtuple is same > as newtuple, then we don't require to free the trigtuple. Hm. Seems like this is a very old bug: it's always been legal for a trigger to return the "old" tuple if it felt like it, even if plpgsql didn't happen to exercise that case. Because of that angle, I'm not really happy with using plpgsql as part of the test case. The bug ought to be repaired in the back branches too, but this test will prove little in the back branches. Moreover, if somebody were to rejigger plpgsql again, the test might stop proving anything at all. I wonder whether it is worth creating a C trigger function (probably in regress.c) specifically to exercise this situation. If not, I'm inclined not to bother with adding a test case. regards, tom lane
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Re: invalid memory alloc request size error with commit 4b93f579
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2018-02-26T21:25:25Z
I wrote: > I wonder whether it is worth creating a C trigger function > (probably in regress.c) specifically to exercise this situation. Actually, that doesn't seem too bad at all. I propose applying and back-patching the attached. BTW, I noticed while doing this that the adjacent "funny_dup17" trigger is dead code, and has been since commit 1547ee01 of 1999-09-29. I'm inclined to rip it out, because anyone looking at regress.c would naturally assume that anything in there is being exercised. regards, tom lane
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Re: invalid memory alloc request size error with commit 4b93f579
Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se> — 2018-02-27T01:25:12Z
> On 27 Feb 2018, at 05:25, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > > I wrote: >> I wonder whether it is worth creating a C trigger function >> (probably in regress.c) specifically to exercise this situation. > > Actually, that doesn't seem too bad at all. I propose applying > and back-patching the attached. LGTM > BTW, I noticed while doing this that the adjacent "funny_dup17" > trigger is dead code, and has been since commit 1547ee01 of > 1999-09-29. I'm inclined to rip it out, because anyone looking > at regress.c would naturally assume that anything in there is > being exercised. +1, yes please. regress_dist_ptpath() and regress_path_dist() in regress.c also seem to be dead, and have been so for.. quite some time. cheers ./daniel
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Re: invalid memory alloc request size error with commit 4b93f579
Rushabh Lathia <rushabh.lathia@gmail.com> — 2018-02-27T01:57:45Z
Thanks Tom. On Tue, Feb 27, 2018 at 2:55 AM, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > I wrote: > > I wonder whether it is worth creating a C trigger function > > (probably in regress.c) specifically to exercise this situation. > > Actually, that doesn't seem too bad at all. I propose applying > and back-patching the attached. > > Patch looks good to me. > BTW, I noticed while doing this that the adjacent "funny_dup17" > trigger is dead code, and has been since commit 1547ee01 of > 1999-09-29. I'm inclined to rip it out, because anyone looking > at regress.c would naturally assume that anything in there is > being exercised. > > regards, tom lane > > -- Rushabh Lathia
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Re: invalid memory alloc request size error with commit 4b93f579
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2018-02-27T03:10:06Z
Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se> writes: >> On 27 Feb 2018, at 05:25, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: >> BTW, I noticed while doing this that the adjacent "funny_dup17" >> trigger is dead code, and has been since commit 1547ee01 of >> 1999-09-29. I'm inclined to rip it out, because anyone looking >> at regress.c would naturally assume that anything in there is >> being exercised. > +1, yes please. regress_dist_ptpath() and regress_path_dist() in regress.c > also seem to be dead, and have been so for.. quite some time. Yeah. Looking at https://coverage.postgresql.org/src/test/regress/regress.c.gcov.html it's evident that none of these functions are actually exercised in the regression tests: regress_dist_ptpath unreferenced anywhere regress_path_dist unreferenced anywhere poly2path unreferenced anywhere widget_in used in type definition, but no input ever happens widget_out used in type definition, but no output ever happens pt_in_widget used for operator that evidently isn't called boxarea SQL function is created, but used nowhere funny_dup17 SQL function is created, but used nowhere int44in used in type definition, but no input ever happens int44out used in type definition, but no output ever happens test_fdw_handler used by dummy FDW tests I'm inclined to just remove regress_dist_ptpath, regress_path_dist, poly2path, boxarea, and funny_dup17. The others might better be dealt with by making some actual use of them, since those type and operator creation commands seem to have some test value of their own. I notice BTW that int44in and int44out are not inverses, ie int44out produces a string that int44in can't read :-(. We'd definitely have to fix that if we wanted to make any real use of the type. regards, tom lane
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Re: invalid memory alloc request size error with commit 4b93f579
Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se> — 2018-02-27T05:44:55Z
> On 27 Feb 2018, at 11:10, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > > Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se> writes: >>> On 27 Feb 2018, at 05:25, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: >>> BTW, I noticed while doing this that the adjacent "funny_dup17" >>> trigger is dead code, and has been since commit 1547ee01 of >>> 1999-09-29. I'm inclined to rip it out, because anyone looking >>> at regress.c would naturally assume that anything in there is >>> being exercised. > >> +1, yes please. regress_dist_ptpath() and regress_path_dist() in regress.c >> also seem to be dead, and have been so for.. quite some time. > > Yeah. Looking at > https://coverage.postgresql.org/src/test/regress/regress.c.gcov.html > it's evident that none of these functions are actually exercised > in the regression tests: Aha, that was a more clever way of figuring it out than what I did. > I'm inclined to just remove regress_dist_ptpath, regress_path_dist, > poly2path, boxarea, and funny_dup17. The others might better be dealt > with by making some actual use of them, since those type and operator > creation commands seem to have some test value of their own. Agreed. > I notice BTW that int44in and int44out are not inverses, ie int44out > produces a string that int44in can't read :-(. We'd definitely have to > fix that if we wanted to make any real use of the type. Thats not nice given that the names imply that, but I agree that it’s not something that needs to be changed given its current usecase. That probably warrants a comment in regress.c and/or the create_type test suite though. cheers ./daniel