Thread

Commits

  1. Redesign pageinspect function printing infomask bits

  2. Add to pageinspect function to make t_infomask/t_infomask2 human-readable

  3. Improve documentation of pageinspect

  4. Improve pageinspect module

  1. [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com> — 2017-07-20T03:33:01Z

    Hi
    
    Whenever I'm debugging some kind of corruption incident, possible
    visibility bug, etc, I always land up staring at integer infomasks or using
    a SQL helper function to decode them.
    
    That's silly, so here's a patch to teach pageinspect how to decode
    infomasks to a human readable array of flag names.
    
    Example:
    
    SELECT t_infomask, t_infomask2, flags
    FROM heap_page_items(get_raw_page('test1', 0)),
         LATERAL heap_infomask_flags(t_infomask, t_infomask2, true) m(flags);
     t_infomask | t_infomask2 |                                   flags
    
    ------------+-------------+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
           2816 |           2 |
    {HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED,HEAP_XMIN_INVALID,HEAP_XMAX_INVALID,HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN}
    (1 row)
    
    
    To decode individual mask integers you can just call it directly. It's
    strict, so pass 0 for the other mask if you don't have both, e.g.
    
    SELECT heap_infomask_flags(2816, 0);
    
    The patch backports easily to older pageinspect versions for when you're
    debugging something old.
    
    BTW, I used text[] not enums. That costs a fair bit of memory, but it
    doesn't seem worth worrying too much about in this context.
    
    For convenience it also tests and reports HEAP_LOCKED_UPGRADED and
    HEAP_XMAX_IS_LOCKED_ONLY as pseudo-flags.
    
    I decided not to filter
    out HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED,HEAP_XMIN_INVALID,HEAP_XMAX_INVALID
    when HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN is set; that doesn't make sense when we
    examine HEAP_XMAX_IS_LOCKED_ONLY or HEAP_LOCKED_UPGRADED, and filtering
    them out could be just as confusing as leaving them in.
    
    The infomask2 natts mask is ignored. You can bitwise-and it out in SQL
    pretty easily if needed. I could output it here as a constructed text
    datum, but it seems mostly pointless.
    
    -- 
     Craig Ringer                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
  2. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com> — 2017-07-20T03:38:45Z

    On 20 July 2017 at 11:33, Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    
    > Hi
    >
    > Whenever I'm debugging some kind of corruption incident, possible
    > visibility bug, etc, I always land up staring at integer infomasks or using
    > a SQL helper function to decode them.
    >
    > That's silly, so here's a patch to teach pageinspect how to decode
    > infomasks to a human readable array of flag names.
    >
    > Example:
    >
    > SELECT t_infomask, t_infomask2, flags
    > FROM heap_page_items(get_raw_page('test1', 0)),
    >      LATERAL heap_infomask_flags(t_infomask, t_infomask2, true) m(flags);
    >  t_infomask | t_infomask2 |                                   flags
    >
    > ------------+-------------+---------------------------------
    > -------------------------------------------
    >        2816 |           2 | {HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED,HEAP_
    > XMIN_INVALID,HEAP_XMAX_INVALID,HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN}
    > (1 row)
    >
    >
    > To decode individual mask integers you can just call it directly. It's
    > strict, so pass 0 for the other mask if you don't have both, e.g.
    >
    > SELECT heap_infomask_flags(2816, 0);
    >
    > The patch backports easily to older pageinspect versions for when you're
    > debugging something old.
    >
    > BTW, I used text[] not enums. That costs a fair bit of memory, but it
    > doesn't seem worth worrying too much about in this context.
    >
    > For convenience it also tests and reports HEAP_LOCKED_UPGRADED and
    > HEAP_XMAX_IS_LOCKED_ONLY as pseudo-flags.
    >
    > I decided not to filter out HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED,HEAP_XMIN_INVALID,HEAP_XMAX_INVALID
    > when HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN is set
    >
    
    Er, decided not to filter out  HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED,HEAP_XMIN_INVALID.
    Obviously wouldn't filter out HEAP_XMAX_INVALID, that was a copy-paste'o.
    
    I wonder if it's worth dropping the HEAP_ prefix. Meh, anyway, usable as-is.
    
    -- 
     Craig Ringer                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
  3. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> — 2017-07-20T03:44:42Z

    On Wed, Jul 19, 2017 at 8:33 PM, Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > That's silly, so here's a patch to teach pageinspect how to decode infomasks
    > to a human readable array of flag names.
    >
    > Example:
    >
    > SELECT t_infomask, t_infomask2, flags
    > FROM heap_page_items(get_raw_page('test1', 0)),
    >      LATERAL heap_infomask_flags(t_infomask, t_infomask2, true) m(flags);
    >  t_infomask | t_infomask2 |                                   flags
    > ------------+-------------+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    >        2816 |           2 |
    > {HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED,HEAP_XMIN_INVALID,HEAP_XMAX_INVALID,HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN}
    > (1 row)
    
    Seems like a good idea to me.
    
    -- 
    Peter Geoghegan
    
    
    
  4. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Julien Rouhaud <rjuju123@gmail.com> — 2017-07-20T06:13:02Z

    On Thu, Jul 20, 2017 at 5:44 AM, Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> wrote:
    > On Wed, Jul 19, 2017 at 8:33 PM, Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    >> That's silly, so here's a patch to teach pageinspect how to decode infomasks
    >> to a human readable array of flag names.
    >>
    >> Example:
    >>
    >> SELECT t_infomask, t_infomask2, flags
    >> FROM heap_page_items(get_raw_page('test1', 0)),
    >>      LATERAL heap_infomask_flags(t_infomask, t_infomask2, true) m(flags);
    >>  t_infomask | t_infomask2 |                                   flags
    >> ------------+-------------+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    >>        2816 |           2 |
    >> {HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED,HEAP_XMIN_INVALID,HEAP_XMAX_INVALID,HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN}
    >> (1 row)
    >
    > Seems like a good idea to me.
    >
    
    +1, it'll be really helpful.
    
    
    
  5. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> — 2017-07-20T06:26:53Z

    On Thu, Jul 20, 2017 at 3:13 PM, Julien Rouhaud <rjuju123@gmail.com> wrote:
    > On Thu, Jul 20, 2017 at 5:44 AM, Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> wrote:
    >> On Wed, Jul 19, 2017 at 8:33 PM, Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    >>> That's silly, so here's a patch to teach pageinspect how to decode infomasks
    >>> to a human readable array of flag names.
    >>>
    >>> Example:
    >>>
    >>> SELECT t_infomask, t_infomask2, flags
    >>> FROM heap_page_items(get_raw_page('test1', 0)),
    >>>      LATERAL heap_infomask_flags(t_infomask, t_infomask2, true) m(flags);
    >>>  t_infomask | t_infomask2 |                                   flags
    >>> ------------+-------------+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    >>>        2816 |           2 |
    >>> {HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED,HEAP_XMIN_INVALID,HEAP_XMAX_INVALID,HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN}
    >>> (1 row)
    >>
    >> Seems like a good idea to me.
    >>
    >
    > +1, it'll be really helpful.
    >
    
    +1.
    When I investigated data corruption incident I also wrote a plpgsql
    function for the same purpose, and it was very useful. I think we can
    have the similar thing for lp_flags as well.
    
    Regards,
    
    --
    Masahiko Sawada
    NIPPON TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE CORPORATION
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    
    
  6. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Ashutosh Sharma <ashu.coek88@gmail.com> — 2017-07-20T11:09:26Z

    I had a quick look into this patch and also tested it and following
    are my observations.
    
    1) I am seeing a server crash when passing any non meaningful value
    for t_infomask2 to heap_infomask_flags().
    
    postgres=# SELECT heap_infomask_flags(2816, 3);
    server closed the connection unexpectedly
        This probably means the server terminated abnormally
        before or while processing the request.
    The connection to the server was lost. Attempting reset: Failed.
    !> \q
    
    Following is the backtrace,
    
    (gdb) bt
    #0  0x0000000000d9c55b in pg_detoast_datum (datum=0x0) at fmgr.c:1833
    #1  0x0000000000b87374 in construct_md_array (elems=0x2ad74c0,
    nulls=0x0, ndims=1, dims=0x7ffc0b0bbcd0, lbs=0x7ffc0b0bbcc0,
    elmtype=25, elmlen=-1,
        elmbyval=0 '\000', elmalign=105 'i') at arrayfuncs.c:3382
    #2  0x0000000000b8709f in construct_array (elems=0x2ad74c0, nelems=10,
    elmtype=25, elmlen=-1, elmbyval=0 '\000', elmalign=105 'i') at
    arrayfuncs.c:3316
    #3  0x00007fb8001603a5 in heap_infomask_flags (fcinfo=0x2ad3b88) at
    heapfuncs.c:597
    #4  0x000000000082f4cd in ExecInterpExpr (state=0x2ad3aa0,
    econtext=0x2ad3750, isnull=0x7ffc0b0bbf67 "") at execExprInterp.c:672
    #5  0x000000000088b832 in ExecEvalExprSwitchContext (state=0x2ad3aa0,
    econtext=0x2ad3750, isNull=0x7ffc0b0bbf67 "")
        at ../../../src/include/executor/executor.h:290
    #6  0x000000000088b8e3 in ExecProject (projInfo=0x2ad3a98) at
    ../../../src/include/executor/executor.h:324
    #7  0x000000000088bb89 in ExecResult (node=0x2ad36b8) at nodeResult.c:132
    #8  0x00000000008494fe in ExecProcNode (node=0x2ad36b8) at execProcnode.c:416
    #9  0x000000000084125d in ExecutePlan (estate=0x2ad34a0,
    planstate=0x2ad36b8, use_parallel_mode=0 '\000', operation=CMD_SELECT,
    sendTuples=1 '\001',
        numberTuples=0, direction=ForwardScanDirection, dest=0x2ac0ae0,
    execute_once=1 '\001') at execMain.c:1693
    #10 0x000000000083d54b in standard_ExecutorRun (queryDesc=0x2a42880,
    direction=ForwardScanDirection, count=0, execute_once=1 '\001') at
    execMain.c:362
    #11 0x000000000083d253 in ExecutorRun (queryDesc=0x2a42880,
    direction=ForwardScanDirection, count=0, execute_once=1 '\001') at
    execMain.c:305
    #12 0x0000000000b3dd8f in PortalRunSelect (portal=0x2ad1490, forward=1
    '\001', count=0, dest=0x2ac0ae0) at pquery.c:932
    #13 0x0000000000b3d7e7 in PortalRun (portal=0x2ad1490,
    count=9223372036854775807, isTopLevel=1 '\001', run_once=1 '\001',
    dest=0x2ac0ae0, altdest=0x2ac0ae0,
        completionTag=0x7ffc0b0bc2c0 "") at pquery.c:773
    #14 0x0000000000b31fe4 in exec_simple_query (query_string=0x2a9d9a0
    "SELECT heap_infomask_flags(11008, 1111, true);") at postgres.c:1099
    #15 0x0000000000b3a727 in PostgresMain (argc=1, argv=0x2a49eb0,
    dbname=0x2a1d480 "postgres", username=0x2a49d18 "ashu") at
    postgres.c:4090
    #16 0x0000000000a2cb3f in BackendRun (port=0x2a3e700) at postmaster.c:4357
    #17 0x0000000000a2bc63 in BackendStartup (port=0x2a3e700) at postmaster.c:4029
    #18 0x0000000000a248ab in ServerLoop () at postmaster.c:1753
    #19 0x0000000000a236a9 in PostmasterMain (argc=3, argv=0x2a1b2b0) at
    postmaster.c:1361
    #20 0x00000000008d8054 in main (argc=3, argv=0x2a1b2b0) at main.c:228
    
    2) I can see the documentation for heap_infomask(). But, I do not see
    it being defined or used anywhere in the patch.
    
    +     <para>
    +      The <function>heap_infomask</function> function can be used to unpack the
    +      recognised bits of the infomasks of heap tuples.
    +     </para>
    
    3) If show_combined flag is set to it's default value and a tuple is
    frozen then may i know the reason for not showing it as frozen tuple
    when t_infomask2
    is passed as zero.
    
    postgres=# SELECT heap_infomask_flags(2816, 0);
                        heap_infomask_flags
    -----------------------------------------------------------
     {HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED,HEAP_XMIN_INVALID,HEAP_XMAX_INVALID}
    (1 row)
    
    postgres=# SELECT heap_infomask_flags(2816, 1);
                                heap_infomask_flags
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
     {HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED,HEAP_XMIN_INVALID,HEAP_XMAX_INVALID,HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN}
    (1 row)
    
    
    4) I think, it would be better to use the same argument name for the
    newly added function i.e heap_infomask_flags() in both documentation
    and sql file. I am basically refering to 'include_combined' argument.
    IF you see the function definition, the argument name used is
    'include_combined' whereas in documentation you have mentioned
    'show_combined'.
    
    --
    With Regards,
    Ashutosh Sharma
    EnterpriseDB:http://www.enterprisedb.com
    
    On Thu, Jul 20, 2017 at 11:56 AM, Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> wrote:
    > On Thu, Jul 20, 2017 at 3:13 PM, Julien Rouhaud <rjuju123@gmail.com> wrote:
    >> On Thu, Jul 20, 2017 at 5:44 AM, Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> wrote:
    >>> On Wed, Jul 19, 2017 at 8:33 PM, Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    >>>> That's silly, so here's a patch to teach pageinspect how to decode infomasks
    >>>> to a human readable array of flag names.
    >>>>
    >>>> Example:
    >>>>
    >>>> SELECT t_infomask, t_infomask2, flags
    >>>> FROM heap_page_items(get_raw_page('test1', 0)),
    >>>>      LATERAL heap_infomask_flags(t_infomask, t_infomask2, true) m(flags);
    >>>>  t_infomask | t_infomask2 |                                   flags
    >>>> ------------+-------------+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    >>>>        2816 |           2 |
    >>>> {HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED,HEAP_XMIN_INVALID,HEAP_XMAX_INVALID,HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN}
    >>>> (1 row)
    >>>
    >>> Seems like a good idea to me.
    >>>
    >>
    >> +1, it'll be really helpful.
    >>
    >
    > +1.
    > When I investigated data corruption incident I also wrote a plpgsql
    > function for the same purpose, and it was very useful. I think we can
    > have the similar thing for lp_flags as well.
    >
    > Regards,
    >
    > --
    > Masahiko Sawada
    > NIPPON TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE CORPORATION
    > NTT Open Source Software Center
    >
    >
    > --
    > Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
    > To make changes to your subscription:
    > http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers
    
    
    
  7. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com> — 2017-07-20T11:52:38Z

    On 20 Jul. 2017 19:09, "Ashutosh Sharma" <ashu.coek88@gmail.com> wrote:
    
    I had a quick look into this patch and also tested it and following
    are my observations.
    
    
    Thanks very much.
    
    I'll expand the tests to cover various normal and nonsensical masks and
    combinations and fix the identified issues.
    
    This was a quick morning's work in amongst other things so not surprised I
    missed a few details. The check is appreciated.
    
  8. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com> — 2017-07-21T03:29:14Z

    On 20 July 2017 at 19:09, Ashutosh Sharma <ashu.coek88@gmail.com> wrote:
    
    > I had a quick look into this patch and also tested it and following
    > are my observations.
    >
    > 1) I am seeing a server crash when passing any non meaningful value
    > for t_infomask2 to heap_infomask_flags().
    >
    > postgres=# SELECT heap_infomask_flags(2816, 3);
    > server closed the connection unexpectedly
    >     This probably means the server terminated abnormally
    >     before or while processing the request.
    > The connection to the server was lost. Attempting reset: Failed.
    > !> \q
    >
    > Following is the backtrace,
    >
    > (gdb) bt
    > #0  0x0000000000d9c55b in pg_detoast_datum (datum=0x0) at fmgr.c:1833
    > #1  0x0000000000b87374 in construct_md_array (elems=0x2ad74c0,
    > nulls=0x0, ndims=1, dims=0x7ffc0b0bbcd0, lbs=0x7ffc0b0bbcc0,
    > elmtype=25, elmlen=-1,
    >     elmbyval=0 '\000', elmalign=105 'i') at arrayfuncs.c:3382
    > #2  0x0000000000b8709f in construct_array (elems=0x2ad74c0, nelems=10,
    > elmtype=25, elmlen=-1, elmbyval=0 '\000', elmalign=105 'i') at
    > arrayfuncs.c:3316
    > #3  0x00007fb8001603a5 in heap_infomask_flags (fcinfo=0x2ad3b88) at
    > heapfuncs.c:597
    >
    
    
    Fixed.
    
    
    > 2) I can see the documentation for heap_infomask(). But, I do not see
    > it being defined or used anywhere in the patch.
    >
    > +     <para>
    > +      The <function>heap_infomask</function> function can be used to
    > unpack the
    > +      recognised bits of the infomasks of heap tuples.
    > +     </para>
    >
    
    Fixed. Renamed the function, missed a spot.
    
    
    > 3) If show_combined flag is set to it's default value and a tuple is
    > frozen then may i know the reason for not showing it as frozen tuple
    > when t_infomask2
    > is passed as zero.
    
    
    It was a consequence of (1). Fixed.
    
    
    > 4) I think, it would be better to use the same argument name for the
    > newly added function i.e heap_infomask_flags() in both documentation
    > and sql file. I am basically refering to 'include_combined' argument.
    > IF you see the function definition, the argument name used is
    > 'include_combined' whereas in documentation you have mentioned
    > 'show_combined'.
    >
    
    Fixed, thanks.
    
    I want to find time to expand the tests on this some more and look more
    closely, but here it is for now.
    
    -- 
     Craig Ringer                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
  9. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Moon, Insung <moon_insung_i3@lab.ntt.co.jp> — 2017-08-15T01:11:42Z

    Dear Craig Ringer
    
     
    
    Frist, thank you for implementing the necessary function.
    
     
    
    but, i have some question.
    
     
    
    question 1) vacuum freeze hint bits
    
    If run a vacuum freeze, bits in the infomask will be 0x0300.
    
    in this case, if output the value of informsk in the run to you modified,
    
    HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED(0x0100), HEAP_XMIN_INVALID(0x0200), HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN(0x0300)
    
    all outputs to hint bits.
    
     
    
    is it normal to output values?
    
     
    
    if look at htup_details.h code,
    
     
    
    #define HeapTupleHeaderXminInvalid(tup) \
    
    ( \
    
                  ((tup)->t_infomask & (HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED|HEAP_XMIN_INVALID)) == \
    
                                HEAP_XMIN_INVALID \
    
    )
    
    #define HeapTupleHeaderSetXminCommitted(tup) \
    
    ( \
    
                  AssertMacro(!HeapTupleHeaderXminInvalid(tup)), \
    
                  ((tup)->t_infomask |= HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED) \
    
    )
    
     
    
    HEAP_XMIN_INVALID and HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED can not be write simultaneously.
    
     
    
    So I think the value of 0x0300 is to HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED, HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN
    
    Only output needs to be values.
    
     
    
     
    
    question 2) xmax lock hint bits
    
    similar to the vacuum freezeze question..
    
    Assume that the infomask has a bit of 0x0050
    
     
    
    In this case, if run on the code that you modified,
    
    HEAP_XMAX_KEYSHR_LOCK(0x0010), HEAP_XMAX_EXCL_LOCK(0x0040), HEAP_XMAX_IS_LOCKED_ONLY
    
    three hint bits are the output.
    
     
    
    if look at htup_details.h code,
    
     
    
    #define HEAP_XMAX_IS_SHR_LOCKED(infomask) \
    
                  (((infomask) & HEAP_LOCK_MASK) == HEAP_XMAX_SHR_LOCK)
    
    #define HEAP_XMAX_IS_EXCL_LOCKED(infomask) \
    
                  (((infomask) & HEAP_LOCK_MASK) == HEAP_XMAX_EXCL_LOCK)
    
    #define HEAP_XMAX_IS_KEYSHR_LOCKED(infomask) \
    
                  (((infomask) & HEAP_LOCK_MASK) == HEAP_XMAX_KEYSHR_LOCK)
    
     
    
    It is divided into to hint bits.
    
    so I think this part needs to fix.
    
     
    
    If my opinion may be wrong. So plz check one more time.
    
     
    
    Regards.
    
    Moon
    
     
    
    From: pgsql-hackers-owner@postgresql.org [mailto:pgsql-hackers-owner@postgresql.org] On Behalf Of Craig Ringer
    Sent: Thursday, July 20, 2017 8:53 PM
    To: Ashutosh Sharma
    Cc: PostgreSQL Hackers; Julien Rouhaud; Pavan Deolasee; Álvaro Herrera; Peter Eisentraut; Masahiko Sawada; abhijit Menon-Sen; Peter Geoghegan
    Subject: Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks
    
     
    
     
    
     
    
    On 20 Jul. 2017 19:09, "Ashutosh Sharma" <ashu.coek88@gmail.com <mailto:ashu.coek88@gmail.com> > wrote:
    
    I had a quick look into this patch and also tested it and following
    are my observations.
    
     
    
    Thanks very much.
    
     
    
    I'll expand the tests to cover various normal and nonsensical masks and combinations and fix the identified issues.
    
     
    
    This was a quick morning's work in amongst other things so not surprised I missed a few details. The check is appreciated.
    
    
  10. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com> — 2017-08-15T01:59:05Z

    On 15 August 2017 at 09:11, Moon Insung <Moon_Insung_i3@lab.ntt.co.jp>
    wrote:
    
    > Dear Craig Ringer
    >
    >
    >
    > Frist, thank you for implementing the necessary function.
    >
    >
    >
    > but, i have some question.
    >
    >
    >
    > question 1) vacuum freeze hint bits
    >
    > If run a vacuum freeze, bits in the infomask will be 0x0300.
    >
    > in this case, if output the value of informsk in the run to you modified,
    >
    > HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED(0x0100), HEAP_XMIN_INVALID(0x0200),
    > HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN(0x0300)
    >
    > all outputs to hint bits.
    >
    >
    >
    > is it normal to output values?
    >
    >
    >
    > if look at htup_details.h code,
    >
    >
    >
    > #define HeapTupleHeaderXminInvalid(tup) \
    >
    > ( \
    >
    >               ((tup)->t_infomask & (HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED|HEAP_XMIN_INVALID))
    > == \
    >
    >                             HEAP_XMIN_INVALID \
    >
    > )
    >
    > #define HeapTupleHeaderSetXminCommitted(tup) \
    >
    > ( \
    >
    >               AssertMacro(!HeapTupleHeaderXminInvalid(tup)), \
    >
    >               ((tup)->t_infomask |= HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED) \
    >
    > )
    >
    >
    >
    > HEAP_XMIN_INVALID and HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED can not be write simultaneously.
    >
    
    The bits are set, those macros just test to exclude the special meaning of
    both bits being set at once to mean "frozen".
    
    I was reluctant to filter out  HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED and HEAP_XMIN_INVALID
    when we detect that it's frozen, because that could well be misleading when
    debugging.
    
    If you think that is useful, then I suggest you add an option so that when
    it's outputting the interpreted mask not the raw mask, it suppresses output
    of HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED and HEAP_XMIN_INVALID if HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN.
    
    question 2) xmax lock hint bits
    >
    > similar to the vacuum freezeze question..
    >
    > Assume that the infomask has a bit of 0x0050
    >
    >
    >
    > In this case, if run on the code that you modified,
    >
    > HEAP_XMAX_KEYSHR_LOCK(0x0010), HEAP_XMAX_EXCL_LOCK(0x0040),
    > HEAP_XMAX_IS_LOCKED_ONLY
    >
    > three hint bits are the output.
    >
    >
    >
    > if look at htup_details.h code,
    >
    >
    >
    > #define HEAP_XMAX_IS_SHR_LOCKED(infomask) \
    >
    >               (((infomask) & HEAP_LOCK_MASK) == HEAP_XMAX_SHR_LOCK)
    >
    > #define HEAP_XMAX_IS_EXCL_LOCKED(infomask) \
    >
    >               (((infomask) & HEAP_LOCK_MASK) == HEAP_XMAX_EXCL_LOCK)
    >
    > #define HEAP_XMAX_IS_KEYSHR_LOCKED(infomask) \
    >
    >               (((infomask) & HEAP_LOCK_MASK) == HEAP_XMAX_KEYSHR_LOCK)
    >
    >
    >
    > It is divided into to hint bits.
    >
    > so I think this part needs to fix.
    >
    
    It's the same issue as above, with the same answer IMO.
    
    If we're showing the raw mask bits we should show the raw mask bits only.
    
    But if we're showing combined bits and masks too, I guess we should filter
    out the raw bits when matched by some mask.
    
    I'm not entirely convinced by that, since I think hiding information could
    create more confusion than it fixes. I welcome others' views here.
    
    -- 
     Craig Ringer                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
  11. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> — 2017-08-15T13:24:28Z

    On Mon, Aug 14, 2017 at 9:59 PM, Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > The bits are set, those macros just test to exclude the special meaning of
    > both bits being set at once to mean "frozen".
    >
    > I was reluctant to filter out  HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED and HEAP_XMIN_INVALID
    > when we detect that it's frozen, because that could well be misleading when
    > debugging.
    
    I don't think so -- the "committed" and "invalid" meanings are
    effectively canceled when the "frozen" mask is present.
    
    I mean, "committed" and "invalid" contradict each other...
    
    -- 
    Robert Haas
    EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
    The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company
    
    
    
  12. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com> — 2017-08-15T13:59:03Z

    
    On 08/15/2017 03:24 PM, Robert Haas wrote:
    > On Mon, Aug 14, 2017 at 9:59 PM, Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    >> The bits are set, those macros just test to exclude the special meaning of
    >> both bits being set at once to mean "frozen".
    >>
    >> I was reluctant to filter out  HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED and HEAP_XMIN_INVALID
    >> when we detect that it's frozen, because that could well be misleading when
    >> debugging.
    > 
    > I don't think so -- the "committed" and "invalid" meanings are
    > effectively canceled when the "frozen" mask is present.
    > 
    > I mean, "committed" and "invalid" contradict each other...
    > 
    
    FWIW I agree with Craig - the functions should output the masks raw, 
    without any filtering. The reason is that when you're investigating data 
    corruption or unexpected behavior, all this is very useful when 
    reasoning about what might (not) have happened.
    
    Or at least make the filtering optional.
    
    regards
    
    -- 
    Tomas Vondra                  http://www.2ndQuadrant.com
    PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services
    
    
    
  13. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> — 2017-08-15T14:12:48Z

    On Tue, Aug 15, 2017 at 10:59 PM, Tomas Vondra
    <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    >
    >
    > On 08/15/2017 03:24 PM, Robert Haas wrote:
    >>
    >> On Mon, Aug 14, 2017 at 9:59 PM, Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com>
    >> wrote:
    >>>
    >>> The bits are set, those macros just test to exclude the special meaning
    >>> of
    >>> both bits being set at once to mean "frozen".
    >>>
    >>> I was reluctant to filter out  HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED and HEAP_XMIN_INVALID
    >>> when we detect that it's frozen, because that could well be misleading
    >>> when
    >>> debugging.
    >>
    >>
    >> I don't think so -- the "committed" and "invalid" meanings are
    >> effectively canceled when the "frozen" mask is present.
    >>
    >> I mean, "committed" and "invalid" contradict each other...
    >>
    >
    > FWIW I agree with Craig - the functions should output the masks raw, without
    > any filtering. The reason is that when you're investigating data corruption
    > or unexpected behavior, all this is very useful when reasoning about what
    > might (not) have happened.
    >
    > Or at least make the filtering optional.
    >
    
    I'd vote for having both and making one optional (perhaps filtering?).
    Both are useful to me for the debugging and study purpose.
    
    Regards,
    
    --
    Masahiko Sawada
    NIPPON TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE CORPORATION
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    
    
  14. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> — 2017-08-15T17:54:04Z

    On Tue, Aug 15, 2017 at 9:59 AM, Tomas Vondra
    <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    >> I don't think so -- the "committed" and "invalid" meanings are
    >> effectively canceled when the "frozen" mask is present.
    >>
    >> I mean, "committed" and "invalid" contradict each other...
    >
    > FWIW I agree with Craig - the functions should output the masks raw, without
    > any filtering. The reason is that when you're investigating data corruption
    > or unexpected behavior, all this is very useful when reasoning about what
    > might (not) have happened.
    >
    > Or at least make the filtering optional.
    
    I don't think "filtering" is the right way to think about it.  It's
    just labeling each combination of bits with the meaning appropriate to
    that combination of bits.
    
    I mean, if you were displaying the contents of a CLOG entry, would you
    want the value 3 to be displayed as COMMITTED ABORTED SUBCOMMITTED
    because TRANSACTION_STATUS_COMMITTED|TRANSACTION_STATUS_ABORTED ==
    TRANSACTION_STATUS_SUB_COMMITTED?
    
    I realize that you may be used to thinking of the HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED
    and HEAP_XMAX_COMMITTED bits as two separate bits, but that's not
    really true any more.  They're a 2-bit field that can have one of four
    values: committed, aborted, frozen, or none of the above.
    
    -- 
    Robert Haas
    EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
    The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company
    
    
    
  15. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com> — 2017-08-15T19:42:10Z

    
    On 08/15/2017 07:54 PM, Robert Haas wrote:
    > On Tue, Aug 15, 2017 at 9:59 AM, Tomas Vondra
    > <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    >>> I don't think so -- the "committed" and "invalid" meanings are
    >>> effectively canceled when the "frozen" mask is present.
    >>>
    >>> I mean, "committed" and "invalid" contradict each other...
    >>
    >> FWIW I agree with Craig - the functions should output the masks raw, without
    >> any filtering. The reason is that when you're investigating data corruption
    >> or unexpected behavior, all this is very useful when reasoning about what
    >> might (not) have happened.
    >>
    >> Or at least make the filtering optional.
    > 
    > I don't think "filtering" is the right way to think about it.  It's
    > just labeling each combination of bits with the meaning appropriate to
    > that combination of bits.
    > 
    > I mean, if you were displaying the contents of a CLOG entry, would you
    > want the value 3 to be displayed as COMMITTED ABORTED SUBCOMMITTED
    > because TRANSACTION_STATUS_COMMITTED|TRANSACTION_STATUS_ABORTED ==
    > TRANSACTION_STATUS_SUB_COMMITTED?
    > 
    > I realize that you may be used to thinking of the HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED
    > and HEAP_XMAX_COMMITTED bits as two separate bits, but that's not
    > really true any more.  They're a 2-bit field that can have one of four
    > values: committed, aborted, frozen, or none of the above.
    > 
    
    All I'm saying is that having the complete information (knowing which 
    bits are actually set in the bitmask) is valuable when reasoning about 
    how you might have gotten to the current state. Which I think is what 
    Craig is after.
    
    What I think we should not do is interpret the bitmasks (omitting some 
    of the information) assuming all the bits were set correctly.
    
    regards
    
    -- 
    Tomas Vondra                  http://www.2ndQuadrant.com
    PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services
    
    
    
  16. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> — 2017-08-15T19:55:24Z

    On Tue, Aug 15, 2017 at 3:42 PM, Tomas Vondra
    <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > What I think we should not do is interpret the bitmasks (omitting some of
    > the information) assuming all the bits were set correctly.
    
    I'm still confused.  HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED|HEAP_XMIN_ABORTED ==
    HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN.  Nobody is proposing to omit anything; to the
    contrary, what's being proposed is not to display the same thing twice
    (and in a misleading fashion, to boot).
    
    -- 
    Robert Haas
    EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
    The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company
    
    
    
  17. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com> — 2017-08-15T20:36:19Z

    
    On 08/15/2017 09:55 PM, Robert Haas wrote:
    > On Tue, Aug 15, 2017 at 3:42 PM, Tomas Vondra
    > <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    >> What I think we should not do is interpret the bitmasks (omitting some of
    >> the information) assuming all the bits were set correctly.
    > 
    > I'm still confused. HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED|HEAP_XMIN_ABORTED == 
    > HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN. Nobody is proposing to omit anything; to the 
    > contrary, what's being proposed is not to display the same thing
    > twice (and in a misleading fashion, to boot).
    > 
    
    I understand your point. Assume you're looking at this bit of code:
    
         if (HeapTupleHeaderXminCommitted(enumval_tup->t_data))
             return;
    
    which is essentially
    
         if (enumval_tup->t_data & HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED)
             return;
    
    If the function only gives you HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN, how likely is it you 
    miss this actually evaluates as true?
    
    You might say that people investigating issues in this area of code 
    should be aware of how HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN is defined, and perhaps you're 
    right ...
    
    regards
    
    -- 
    Tomas Vondra                  http://www.2ndQuadrant.com
    PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services
    
    
    
  18. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Moon, Insung <moon_insung_i3@lab.ntt.co.jp> — 2017-08-16T01:33:23Z

    I checked for code related to infomask.
    (add flag state -- HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED, HEAP_XMIN_INVALID, HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN)
    
    first i'm still beginner level about postgresql, so my opinion may be wrong.
    
    if the "HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED" flag is added, check the function of "HeapTupleHeaderXminInvalid"
    if the "HEAP_XMIN_INVALID" flag is added, check the function of "HeapTupleHeaderXminCommitted"
    if the "HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN" flag is added, use the "HeapTupleHeaderSetXminFrozen" function or
    use the code as 
    --------------------------------------
    xid = HeapTupleHeaderGetXmin(tuple);
    if (TransactionIdIsNormal(xid))
    {
        if (TransactionIdPrecedes(xid, cutoff_xid))
        {
            frz->t_infomask |= HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN;
            changed = true;
        }
        else
            totally_frozen = false;
    } 
    --------------------------------------
    to add the flag.
    
    so as a result, HEAP_XMIN_INVALID and HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED is cannot coexist.
    unfortunately, i don't know if HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED and HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN flags can coexist.
    
    so i think it's also a good idea to output the raw masks, without any filtering.
    however, i think the information that is presented to the user should inform us which flags was entered.
    
    Regards.
    Moon
    
    > -----Original Message-----
    > From: pgsql-hackers-owner@postgresql.org
    > [mailto:pgsql-hackers-owner@postgresql.org] On Behalf Of Tomas Vondra
    > Sent: Wednesday, August 16, 2017 5:36 AM
    > To: Robert Haas
    > Cc: pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
    > Subject: Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks
    > 
    > 
    > 
    > On 08/15/2017 09:55 PM, Robert Haas wrote:
    > > On Tue, Aug 15, 2017 at 3:42 PM, Tomas Vondra
    > > <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > >> What I think we should not do is interpret the bitmasks (omitting
    > >> some of the information) assuming all the bits were set correctly.
    > >
    > > I'm still confused. HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED|HEAP_XMIN_ABORTED ==
    > > HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN. Nobody is proposing to omit anything; to the
    > > contrary, what's being proposed is not to display the same thing twice
    > > (and in a misleading fashion, to boot).
    > >
    > 
    > I understand your point. Assume you're looking at this bit of code:
    > 
    >      if (HeapTupleHeaderXminCommitted(enumval_tup->t_data))
    >          return;
    > 
    > which is essentially
    > 
    >      if (enumval_tup->t_data & HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED)
    >          return;
    > 
    > If the function only gives you HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN, how likely is it you miss
    > this actually evaluates as true?
    > 
    > You might say that people investigating issues in this area of code should
    > be aware of how HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN is defined, and perhaps you're right ...
    > 
    > regards
    > 
    > --
    > Tomas Vondra                  http://www.2ndQuadrant.com
    > PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services
    > 
    > 
    > --
    > Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make
    > changes to your subscription:
    > http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers
    
    
    
    
    
  19. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com> — 2017-08-16T01:37:49Z

    On 16 August 2017 at 03:42, Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com>
    wrote:
    
    >
    >
    > On 08/15/2017 07:54 PM, Robert Haas wrote:
    >
    >> On Tue, Aug 15, 2017 at 9:59 AM, Tomas Vondra
    >> <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    >>
    >>> I don't think so -- the "committed" and "invalid" meanings are
    >>>> effectively canceled when the "frozen" mask is present.
    >>>>
    >>>> I mean, "committed" and "invalid" contradict each other...
    >>>>
    >>>
    >>> FWIW I agree with Craig - the functions should output the masks raw,
    >>> without
    >>> any filtering. The reason is that when you're investigating data
    >>> corruption
    >>> or unexpected behavior, all this is very useful when reasoning about what
    >>> might (not) have happened.
    >>>
    >>> Or at least make the filtering optional.
    >>>
    >>
    >> I don't think "filtering" is the right way to think about it.  It's
    >> just labeling each combination of bits with the meaning appropriate to
    >> that combination of bits.
    >>
    >> I mean, if you were displaying the contents of a CLOG entry, would you
    >> want the value 3 to be displayed as COMMITTED ABORTED SUBCOMMITTED
    >> because TRANSACTION_STATUS_COMMITTED|TRANSACTION_STATUS_ABORTED ==
    >> TRANSACTION_STATUS_SUB_COMMITTED?
    >>
    >> I realize that you may be used to thinking of the HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED
    >> and HEAP_XMAX_COMMITTED bits as two separate bits, but that's not
    >> really true any more.  They're a 2-bit field that can have one of four
    >> values: committed, aborted, frozen, or none of the above.
    >>
    >>
    > All I'm saying is that having the complete information (knowing which bits
    > are actually set in the bitmask) is valuable when reasoning about how you
    > might have gotten to the current state. Which I think is what Craig is
    > after.
    >
    > What I think we should not do is interpret the bitmasks (omitting some of
    > the information) assuming all the bits were set correctly.
    
    
    I agree, and the patch already does half of this: it can output just the
    raw bit flags, or it can interpret them to show HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN etc.
    
    So the required change, which seems to have broad agreement, is to have the
    "interpret the bits" mode show only HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN when it sees
    HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED|HEAP_XMIN_INVALID, etc. We can retain raw-flags output
    as-is for when seriously bogus state is suspected.
    
    Any takers?
    
    -- 
     Craig Ringer                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
  20. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> — 2017-08-16T15:14:03Z

    On Tue, Aug 15, 2017 at 4:36 PM, Tomas Vondra
    <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > You might say that people investigating issues in this area of code should
    > be aware of how HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN is defined, and perhaps you're right ...
    
    Yes, I think that's what I would say.  I mean, if you happen to NOT
    know that committed|invalid == frozen, but you DO know what committed
    means and what invalid means, then you're going to be *really*
    confused when you see committed and invalid set on the same tuple.
    Showing you frozen has got to be clearer.
    
    Now, I agree with you that a test like (enumval_tup->t_data &
    HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED) could be confusing to someone who doesn't realize
    that HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN & HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED == HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED,
    but I think that's just one of those things that unfortunately is
    going to require adequate knowledge for people investigating issues.
    If there's an action item there, it might be to try to come up with a
    way to make the source code clearer.
    
    -- 
    Robert Haas
    EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
    The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company
    
    
    
  21. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com> — 2017-08-17T00:20:54Z

    On 16 August 2017 at 23:14, Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> wrote:
    
    > On Tue, Aug 15, 2017 at 4:36 PM, Tomas Vondra
    > <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > > You might say that people investigating issues in this area of code
    > should
    > > be aware of how HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN is defined, and perhaps you're right ...
    >
    > Yes, I think that's what I would say.  I mean, if you happen to NOT
    > know that committed|invalid == frozen, but you DO know what committed
    > means and what invalid means, then you're going to be *really*
    > confused when you see committed and invalid set on the same tuple.
    > Showing you frozen has got to be clearer.
    >
    > Now, I agree with you that a test like (enumval_tup->t_data &
    > HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED) could be confusing to someone who doesn't realize
    > that HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN & HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED == HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED,
    > but I think that's just one of those things that unfortunately is
    > going to require adequate knowledge for people investigating issues.
    > If there's an action item there, it might be to try to come up with a
    > way to make the source code clearer.
    >
    >
    For other multi-purpose flags we have macros, and I think it'd make sense
    to use them here too.
    
    Eschew direct use of  HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED, HEAP_XMIN_INVALID and
    HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN in tests. Instead, consistently use HeapXminIsFrozen(),
    HeapXminIsCommitted(), and HeapXminIsInvalid() or something like that.
    
    -- 
     Craig Ringer                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
  22. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Ashutosh Sharma <ashu.coek88@gmail.com> — 2017-09-14T11:57:27Z

    Hi Craig,
    
    On Thu, Aug 17, 2017 at 5:50 AM, Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > On 16 August 2017 at 23:14, Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> wrote:
    >>
    >> On Tue, Aug 15, 2017 at 4:36 PM, Tomas Vondra
    >> <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    >> > You might say that people investigating issues in this area of code
    >> > should
    >> > be aware of how HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN is defined, and perhaps you're right
    >> > ...
    >>
    >> Yes, I think that's what I would say.  I mean, if you happen to NOT
    >> know that committed|invalid == frozen, but you DO know what committed
    >> means and what invalid means, then you're going to be *really*
    >> confused when you see committed and invalid set on the same tuple.
    >> Showing you frozen has got to be clearer.
    >>
    >> Now, I agree with you that a test like (enumval_tup->t_data &
    >> HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED) could be confusing to someone who doesn't realize
    >> that HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN & HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED == HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED,
    >> but I think that's just one of those things that unfortunately is
    >> going to require adequate knowledge for people investigating issues.
    >> If there's an action item there, it might be to try to come up with a
    >> way to make the source code clearer.
    >>
    >
    > For other multi-purpose flags we have macros, and I think it'd make sense to
    > use them here too.
    >
    > Eschew direct use of  HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED, HEAP_XMIN_INVALID and
    > HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN in tests. Instead, consistently use HeapXminIsFrozen(),
    > HeapXminIsCommitted(), and HeapXminIsInvalid() or something like that.
    >
    > --
    
    Are you planning to work on the review comments from Robert, Moon
    Insung and supply the new patch. I just had a quick glance into this
    mail thread (after a long time) and could understand Robert's concern
    till some extent. I think, he is trying to say that if a tuple is
    frozen (committed|invalid) then it shouldn't be shown as COMMITTED and
    INVALID together in fact it should just be displayed as FROZEN tuple.
    
    -- 
    With Regards,
    Ashutosh Sharma
    EnterpriseDB:http://www.enterprisedb.com
    
    
    
  23. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com> — 2017-09-14T14:00:54Z

    On 14 September 2017 at 19:57, Ashutosh Sharma <ashu.coek88@gmail.com>
    wrote:
    
    
    >
    > Are you planning to work on the review comments from Robert, Moon
    > Insung and supply the new patch. I just had a quick glance into this
    > mail thread (after a long time) and could understand Robert's concern
    > till some extent. I think, he is trying to say that if a tuple is
    > frozen (committed|invalid) then it shouldn't be shown as COMMITTED and
    > INVALID together in fact it should just be displayed as FROZEN tuple.
    
    
    Yes, I'd like to, and should have time for it in this CF.
    
    My plan is to emit raw flags by default, so FROZEN would't be shown at all,
    only COMMITTED|INVALID. If the bool to decode combined flags is set, then
    it'll show things like FROZEN, and hide COMMITTED|INVALID. Similar for
    other combos.
    
    -- 
     Craig Ringer                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
  24. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> — 2017-10-12T23:35:34Z

    On Tue, Aug 15, 2017 at 10:54 AM, Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> wrote:
    >> Or at least make the filtering optional.
    >
    > I don't think "filtering" is the right way to think about it.  It's
    > just labeling each combination of bits with the meaning appropriate to
    > that combination of bits.
    
    I do. -1 to not just showing what's on the page -- if the
    HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED and HEAP_XMIN_ABORTED bits are set, then I think
    we should show them. Yeah, I accept that there is a real danger of
    confusing people with that. Unfortunately, I think that displaying
    HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN will cause even more confusion. I don't think that
    HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN is an abstraction at all. It's a notational
    convenience.
    
    I don't think it's our place to "interpret" the bits. Are we *also*
    going to show HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN when xmin is physically set to
    FrozenTransactionId? Where does it end?
    
    I think that we should prominently document that HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED
    |HEAP_XMIN_ABORTED == HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN, rather than trying to hide
    complexity that we have no business hiding in a tool like pageinspect.
    
    -- 
    Peter Geoghegan
    
    
    
  25. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> — 2017-10-13T20:02:34Z

    On Thu, Oct 12, 2017 at 7:35 PM, Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> wrote:
    > On Tue, Aug 15, 2017 at 10:54 AM, Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> wrote:
    >>> Or at least make the filtering optional.
    >>
    >> I don't think "filtering" is the right way to think about it.  It's
    >> just labeling each combination of bits with the meaning appropriate to
    >> that combination of bits.
    >
    > I do. -1 to not just showing what's on the page -- if the
    > HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED and HEAP_XMIN_ABORTED bits are set, then I think
    > we should show them. Yeah, I accept that there is a real danger of
    > confusing people with that. Unfortunately, I think that displaying
    > HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN will cause even more confusion. I don't think that
    > HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN is an abstraction at all. It's a notational
    > convenience.
    
    Well, *I* think that HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN is an abstraction.  That's why
    we have #define -- to help us create abstractions.
    
    > I don't think it's our place to "interpret" the bits. Are we *also*
    > going to show HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN when xmin is physically set to
    > FrozenTransactionId?
    
    No, of course not.  We're talking about how to display the 256 and 512
    bits of t_infomask.  Those have four states: nothing, committed,
    invalid, frozen.  You're arguing that frozen isn't a real state, that
    it's somehow just a combination of committed and invalid, but I think
    that's the wrong way of thinking about it.  When the 256-bit is clear,
    the 512-bit tells you whether the xmin is known invalid, but when the
    256-bit is set, the 512-bit tells you whether the tuple is also
    frozen.
    
    Before HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN existed, it would have been right to display
    the state where both bits are set as committed|invalid, because that
    would clearly show you that two things had been set that should never
    both be set at the same time.  But now that's a valid state with a
    well-defined meaning and I think we should display the actual meaning
    of that state.
    
    > Where does it end?
    
    I guess it ends wherever we decide to stop.  This isn't some kind of
    crazy slippery slope we're talking about here, where one day we're
    labeling informask bits and the next day it's global thermonuclear
    war.
    
    > I think that we should prominently document that HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED
    > |HEAP_XMIN_ABORTED == HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN, rather than trying to hide
    > complexity that we have no business hiding in a tool like pageinspect.
    
    I respect that opinion, but I don't think I'm trying to hide anything.
    I think I'm proposing that we display the information in what I
    believed to be the clearest and most accurate way.
    
    -- 
    Robert Haas
    EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
    The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company
    
    
    
  26. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> — 2017-10-13T20:36:11Z

    On Fri, Oct 13, 2017 at 1:02 PM, Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> wrote:
    >> I don't think it's our place to "interpret" the bits. Are we *also*
    >> going to show HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN when xmin is physically set to
    >> FrozenTransactionId?
    >
    > No, of course not.  We're talking about how to display the 256 and 512
    > bits of t_infomask.  Those have four states: nothing, committed,
    > invalid, frozen.  You're arguing that frozen isn't a real state, that
    > it's somehow just a combination of committed and invalid, but I think
    > that's the wrong way of thinking about it.
    
    No, I'm arguing that they're just bits. Show the bits, rather than
    interpreting what is displayed. Document that there are other logical
    states that are represented as composites of contradictory/mutually
    exclusive states.
    
    Anyone who hopes to interpret these values has to be an expert anyway,
    or willing to become something of an expert. There is a good chance
    that they've taken an interest because something is already wrong.
    
    > Before HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN existed, it would have been right to display
    > the state where both bits are set as committed|invalid, because that
    > would clearly show you that two things had been set that should never
    > both be set at the same time.  But now that's a valid state with a
    > well-defined meaning and I think we should display the actual meaning
    > of that state.
    >
    >> Where does it end?
    >
    > I guess it ends wherever we decide to stop.
    
    You can take what you're saying much further. What about
    HEAP_XMAX_SHR_LOCK, and HEAP_MOVED? Code like HEAP_LOCKED_UPGRADED()
    pretty strongly undermines the idea that these composite values are
    abstractions.
    
    >> I think that we should prominently document that HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED
    >> |HEAP_XMIN_ABORTED == HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN, rather than trying to hide
    >> complexity that we have no business hiding in a tool like pageinspect.
    >
    > I respect that opinion, but I don't think I'm trying to hide anything.
    > I think I'm proposing that we display the information in what I
    > believed to be the clearest and most accurate way.
    
    pg_filedump doesn't display HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN, either. (Nor does it
    ever display any of the other composite t_infomask/t_infomask2
    values.)
    
    -- 
    Peter Geoghegan
    
    
    
  27. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> — 2017-10-14T17:58:01Z

    On Fri, Oct 13, 2017 at 4:36 PM, Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> wrote:
    > No, I'm arguing that they're just bits. Show the bits, rather than
    > interpreting what is displayed. Document that there are other logical
    > states that are represented as composites of contradictory/mutually
    > exclusive states.
    
    /me shrugs.
    
    I think it's perfectly sensible to view those 2 bits as making up a
    2-bit field with 4 states rather than displaying each bit
    individually, but you obviously disagree.  Fair enough.
    
    >> I guess it ends wherever we decide to stop.
    >
    > You can take what you're saying much further. What about
    > HEAP_XMAX_SHR_LOCK, and HEAP_MOVED? Code like HEAP_LOCKED_UPGRADED()
    > pretty strongly undermines the idea that these composite values are
    > abstractions.
    
    HEAP_MOVED is obviously a different kind of thing.  The combination of
    both bits has no meaning distinct from the meaning of the individual
    bits; in fact, I think it's a shouldn't-happen state.  Not sure about
    HEAP_XMAX_SHR_LOCK.
    
    > pg_filedump doesn't display HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN, either. (Nor does it
    > ever display any of the other composite t_infomask/t_infomask2
    > values.)
    
    I can think of two possible explanations for that.  Number one, the
    tool was written before HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN was invented and hasn't been
    updated for those changes.  Number two, the author of the tool agrees
    with your position rather than mine.
    
    -- 
    Robert Haas
    EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
    The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company
    
    
    
  28. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> — 2017-10-14T21:47:29Z

    On Sat, Oct 14, 2017 at 10:58 AM, Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> wrote:
    > I think it's perfectly sensible to view those 2 bits as making up a
    > 2-bit field with 4 states rather than displaying each bit
    > individually, but you obviously disagree.  Fair enough.
    
    I guess it is that simple.
    
    > I can think of two possible explanations for that.  Number one, the
    > tool was written before HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN was invented and hasn't been
    > updated for those changes.
    
    Have we invented our last t_infomask/t_infomask2 (logical) status already?
    
    > Number two, the author of the tool agrees
    > with your position rather than mine.
    
    I am working on an experimental version of pg_filedump, customized to
    output XML that can be interpreted by an open source hex editor. The
    XML makes the hex editor produce color coded, commented
    tags/annotations for any given heap or B-Tree relation. This includes
    tooltips with literal values for all status bits (including
    t_infomask/t_infomask2 bits, IndexTuple bits, B-Tree meta page status
    bits, PD_* page-level bits, ItemId bits, and others). I tweeted about
    this several months ago, when it was just a tool I wrote for myself,
    and received a surprisingly positive response. It seems like I'm on to
    something, and should release the tool to the community.
    
    I mention this project because it very much informs my perspective
    here. Having spent quite a while deliberately corrupting test data in
    novel ways, just to see what happens, the "work backwards from the
    storage format" perspective feels very natural to me. I do think that
    I understand where you're coming from too, though.
    
    -- 
    Peter Geoghegan
    
    
    
  29. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Vik Fearing <vik.fearing@2ndquadrant.com> — 2017-10-15T13:28:52Z

    On 10/14/2017 11:47 PM, Peter Geoghegan wrote:
    > On Sat, Oct 14, 2017 at 10:58 AM, Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> wrote:
    >> I think it's perfectly sensible to view those 2 bits as making up a
    >> 2-bit field with 4 states rather than displaying each bit
    >> individually, but you obviously disagree.  Fair enough.>
    > I guess it is that simple.
    
    FWIW, my opinion falls in line with Robert's.
    
    Also, whichever way it goes, this is a patch I've been wanting for a
    long time.
    -- 
    Vik Fearing                                          +33 6 46 75 15 36
    http://2ndQuadrant.fr     PostgreSQL : Expertise, Formation et Support
    
    
    
  30. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> — 2017-10-17T00:20:52Z

    On Sat, Oct 14, 2017 at 2:47 PM, Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> wrote:
    > I am working on an experimental version of pg_filedump, customized to
    > output XML that can be interpreted by an open source hex editor. The
    > XML makes the hex editor produce color coded, commented
    > tags/annotations for any given heap or B-Tree relation. This includes
    > tooltips with literal values for all status bits (including
    > t_infomask/t_infomask2 bits, IndexTuple bits, B-Tree meta page status
    > bits, PD_* page-level bits, ItemId bits, and others).
    
    This is now available from: https://github.com/petergeoghegan/pg_hexedit
    
    -- 
    Peter Geoghegan
    
    
    
  31. Re: [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> — 2017-10-17T07:03:19Z

    On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 11:00 PM, Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > On 14 September 2017 at 19:57, Ashutosh Sharma <ashu.coek88@gmail.com>
    > wrote:
    >
    >>
    >>
    >> Are you planning to work on the review comments from Robert, Moon
    >> Insung and supply the new patch. I just had a quick glance into this
    >> mail thread (after a long time) and could understand Robert's concern
    >> till some extent. I think, he is trying to say that if a tuple is
    >> frozen (committed|invalid) then it shouldn't be shown as COMMITTED and
    >> INVALID together in fact it should just be displayed as FROZEN tuple.
    >
    >
    > Yes, I'd like to, and should have time for it in this CF.
    >
    > My plan is to emit raw flags by default, so FROZEN would't be shown at all,
    > only COMMITTED|INVALID. If the bool to decode combined flags is set, then
    > it'll show things like FROZEN, and hide COMMITTED|INVALID. Similar for other
    > combos.
    >
    
    FWIW, I agree with this direction. ISTM the showing the raw flags by
    default and having an option to show combined flags would be a right
    way.
    I sometimes wanted to have the same mechanism for lp_flags but maybe
    it should be discussed on a separated thread.
    
    Regards,
    
    --
    Masahiko Sawada
    NIPPON TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE CORPORATION
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    
    
  32. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-08-21T15:18:58Z

    Can I interest someone into updating this patch?  We now have (I think)
    an agreed design, and I think the development work needed should be
    straightforward.  We also already have the popcount stuff, so that's a
    few lines to be removed from the patch ...
    
    -- 
    Álvaro Herrera                https://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
    PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services
    
    
    
    
  33. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> — 2019-08-21T15:36:10Z

    On Thu, Aug 22, 2019 at 12:19 AM Alvaro Herrera
    <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    >
    > Can I interest someone into updating this patch?  We now have (I think)
    > an agreed design, and I think the development work needed should be
    > straightforward.  We also already have the popcount stuff, so that's a
    > few lines to be removed from the patch ...
    >
    
    I will update the patch and register to the next Commit Fest tomorrow
    if nobody is interested in.
    
    Regards,
    
    --
    Masahiko Sawada
    NIPPON TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE CORPORATION
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    
    
    
  34. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2019-08-22T05:46:50Z

    On Thu, Aug 22, 2019 at 12:36:10AM +0900, Masahiko Sawada wrote:
    > I will update the patch and register to the next Commit Fest tomorrow
    > if nobody is interested in.
    
    Thanks, Sawada-san.
    --
    Michael
    
  35. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> — 2019-08-23T02:09:44Z

    On Thu, Aug 22, 2019 at 12:36 AM Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> wrote:
    >
    > On Thu, Aug 22, 2019 at 12:19 AM Alvaro Herrera
    > <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > >
    > > Can I interest someone into updating this patch?  We now have (I think)
    > > an agreed design, and I think the development work needed should be
    > > straightforward.  We also already have the popcount stuff, so that's a
    > > few lines to be removed from the patch ...
    > >
    >
    > I will update the patch and register to the next Commit Fest tomorrow
    > if nobody is interested in.
    >
    
    Attached the updated patch. While updating the doc I realized that
    perhaps we should have the new section for heap and put the
    descriptions of heap functions into it rather than having them as
    general functions. If we need this change it is for PG12. I will
    register only the new feature patch to the next Commit Fest.
    
    Please review them.
    
    
    
    Regards,
    
    --
    Masahiko Sawada
    NIPPON TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE CORPORATION
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
  36. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2019-08-23T03:27:32Z

    On Fri, Aug 23, 2019 at 11:09:44AM +0900, Masahiko Sawada wrote:
    > While updating the doc I realized that
    > perhaps we should have the new section for heap and put the
    > descriptions of heap functions into it rather than having them as
    > general functions. If we need this change it is for PG12. I will
    > register only the new feature patch to the next Commit Fest.
    
    I agree with the new heap section, and your patch on that looks good.
    While on it, I have one suggestion: fsm_page_contents does not have an
    example of query.  Could we add one while on it?  An example
    consistent with the other function's examples:
    =# SELECT fsm_page_contents(get_raw_page('pg_class', 'fsm', 0));
    --
    Michael
    
  37. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> — 2019-08-23T06:35:01Z

    On Fri, Aug 23, 2019 at 12:27 PM Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote:
    >
    > On Fri, Aug 23, 2019 at 11:09:44AM +0900, Masahiko Sawada wrote:
    > > While updating the doc I realized that
    > > perhaps we should have the new section for heap and put the
    > > descriptions of heap functions into it rather than having them as
    > > general functions. If we need this change it is for PG12. I will
    > > register only the new feature patch to the next Commit Fest.
    >
    > I agree with the new heap section, and your patch on that looks good.
    > While on it, I have one suggestion: fsm_page_contents does not have an
    > example of query.  Could we add one while on it?  An example
    > consistent with the other function's examples:
    > =# SELECT fsm_page_contents(get_raw_page('pg_class', 'fsm', 0));
    
    Good idea. I've updated the doc update patch.
    
    
    Regards,
    
    --
    Masahiko Sawada
    NIPPON TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE CORPORATION
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
  38. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2019-08-23T11:44:04Z

    On Fri, Aug 23, 2019 at 03:35:01PM +0900, Masahiko Sawada wrote:
    > Good idea. I've updated the doc update patch.
    
    Thanks.  I have removed the output part as I am not sure that it is
    that helpful for the reader, and applied it down to v10 where the
    sections for function types have been introduced (see b5e3942).  It
    felt also more natural to move the description of the output after
    giving the query.
    --
    Michael
    
  39. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> — 2019-08-26T06:56:21Z

    On Fri, Aug 23, 2019 at 8:44 PM Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote:
    >
    > On Fri, Aug 23, 2019 at 03:35:01PM +0900, Masahiko Sawada wrote:
    > > Good idea. I've updated the doc update patch.
    >
    > Thanks.  I have removed the output part as I am not sure that it is
    > that helpful for the reader, and applied it down to v10 where the
    > sections for function types have been introduced (see b5e3942).  It
    > felt also more natural to move the description of the output after
    > giving the query.
    
    Thank you!
    
    Regards,
    
    --
    Masahiko Sawada
    NIPPON TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE CORPORATION
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    
    
    
  40. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-09-04T19:46:29Z

    Attached v3 again, for CFbot's benefit.  No changes from last time.
    
    -- 
    Álvaro Herrera                https://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
    PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services
    
  41. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-09-04T20:50:45Z

    On 2019-Sep-04, Alvaro Herrera wrote:
    
    > Attached v3 again, for CFbot's benefit.  No changes from last time.
    
    According to CFbot, the Windows build fails with this patch.  Please
    fix.
    
    -- 
    Álvaro Herrera                https://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
    PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services
    
    
    
    
  42. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2019-09-05T01:41:31Z

    On Wed, Sep 04, 2019 at 04:50:45PM -0400, Alvaro Herrera wrote:
    > According to CFbot, the Windows build fails with this patch.  Please
    > fix.
    
    To save a couple of clicks:
    "C:\projects\postgresql\pageinspect.vcxproj" (default target) (56) ->
    (Link target) ->
      heapfuncs.obj : error LNK2001: unresolved external symbol
      pg_popcount32 [C:\projects\postgresql\pageinspect.vcxproj]
        .\Release\pageinspect\pageinspect.dll : fatal error LNK1120: 1
        unresolved externals [C:\projects\postgresql\pageinspect.vcxproj]
    
    I think that it would be more simple to just use pg_popcount().
    That's what other contrib modules do (for example ltree or intarray).
    --
    Michael
    
  43. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> — 2019-09-05T08:36:07Z

    On Thu, Sep 5, 2019 at 10:41 AM Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote:
    >
    > On Wed, Sep 04, 2019 at 04:50:45PM -0400, Alvaro Herrera wrote:
    > > According to CFbot, the Windows build fails with this patch.  Please
    > > fix.
    >
    > To save a couple of clicks:
    > "C:\projects\postgresql\pageinspect.vcxproj" (default target) (56) ->
    > (Link target) ->
    >   heapfuncs.obj : error LNK2001: unresolved external symbol
    >   pg_popcount32 [C:\projects\postgresql\pageinspect.vcxproj]
    >     .\Release\pageinspect\pageinspect.dll : fatal error LNK1120: 1
    >     unresolved externals [C:\projects\postgresql\pageinspect.vcxproj]
    >
    > I think that it would be more simple to just use pg_popcount().
    > That's what other contrib modules do (for example ltree or intarray).
    
    Thanks. I hope the attached new patch fixes this issue.
    
    Regards,
    
    --
    Masahiko Sawada
    NIPPON TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE CORPORATION
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
  44. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> — 2019-09-08T07:36:36Z

    On Thu, Sep 5, 2019 at 2:17 PM Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> wrote:
    >
    > Thanks. I hope the attached new patch fixes this issue.
    >
    
    *
    +-- decode infomask flags as human readable flag names
    +CREATE FUNCTION heap_infomask_flags(
    +       infomask integer,
    +       infomask2 integer,
    +       decode_combined boolean DEFAULT false)
    +RETURNS text[]
    +AS 'MODULE_PATHNAME', 'heap_infomask_flags'
    
    Isn't it better to name this function as tuple_infomask_flags or
    something like that?  The other functions that start their name with
    heap take page as input.  Also, I think the index-related functions
    that start with index name take blk/page as input.
    
    *
    +   <varlistentry>
    +    <term>
    +     <function>heap_infomask_flags(infomask integer, infomask2
    integer, decode_combined bool) returns text[]</function>
    +     <indexterm>
    +      <primary>heap_infomask_flags</primary>
    +     </indexterm>
    +    </term>
    +    <listitem>
    +     <para>
    +      <function>heap_infomask_flags</function> decodes the
    +      <structfield>t_infomask</structfield> and
    +      <structfield>t_infomask2</structfield> returned by
    +      <function>heap_page_items</function> into a human-readable
    +      array of flag names. This can be used to see the tuple hint bits etc.
    +     </para>
    
    I think it is better to use one example for this function as we do for
    other functions in this doc.
    
    *
    +     <para>
    +      If decode_combined is set, combination flags like
    +      <literal>HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN</literal> are output instead of raw
    +      flags, <literal>HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED</literal> and
    +      <literal>HEAP_XMIN_INVALID</literal>. Default value is
    +      <literal>false</literal>.
    +     </para>
    
    decode_combined should use parameter marker (like
    <parameter>decode_combined</parameter>).  Instead of saying
    "decode_combined" is set, you can use true/false terminology as that
    is what we use for this parameter.  See explanation of "do_detoast"
    that is used in function tuple_data_split in the same doc
    (pageinspect.sgml) for reference.
    
    -- 
    With Regards,
    Amit Kapila.
    EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
    
    
    
    
  45. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> — 2019-09-09T03:05:39Z

    On Sun, Sep 8, 2019 at 1:06 PM Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> wrote:
    >
    > On Thu, Sep 5, 2019 at 2:17 PM Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> wrote:
    > >
    > > Thanks. I hope the attached new patch fixes this issue.
    > >
    >
    
    Some more comments:
    *
    +SELECT t_infomask, t_infomask2, flags
    +FROM heap_page_items
    (get_raw_page('test1', 0)),
    +     LATERAL heap_infomask_flags(t_infomask,
    t_infomask2, true) m(flags);
    
    Do we really need a LATERAL clause in the above kind of queries?
    AFAIU, the functions can reference the columns that exist in the FROM
    list, but I might be missing some point.
    
    *
    +Datum
    +heap_infomask_flags(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS)
    +{
    + uint16 t_infomask = PG_GETARG_INT16(0);
    + uint16 t_infomask2 = PG_GETARG_INT16(1);
    + bool decode_combined = PG_GETARG_BOOL(2);
    + int cnt = 0;
    + ArrayType *a;
    + int bitcnt;
    + Datum *d;
    +
    + bitcnt = pg_popcount((const char *) &t_infomask, sizeof(uint16)) +
    + pg_popcount((const char *) &t_infomask2, sizeof(uint16));
    
    All the functions in this file are allowed only for superusers and
    there is an explanation for the same as mentioned in the file header
    comments.  Is there a reason for this function to be different?
    
    I think one possible explanation could be that here we are not passing
    raw page on which this function will operate on, but isn't the same
    true for tuple_data_split?
    
    In any case, if you think that this function needs to behave
    differently w.r.t superuser privileges, then it is better to add some
    comments in the function header to explain the same.
    
    *
    +Datum
    +heap_infomask_flags(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS)
    {
    ..
    +
    + d = (Datum *) palloc0(sizeof(Datum) * bitcnt);
    
    It seems we don't free this memory before leaving this function.  I
    think it shouldn't be a big problem as this will be normally allocated
    in ExprContext and shouldn't last for long, but if there is no strong
    reason, I think it is better to free it.  You can find the examples in
    code both where we free after such usage and where we don't.  I prefer
    to free it.
    
    -- 
    With Regards,
    Amit Kapila.
    EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
    
    
    
    
  46. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org> — 2019-09-09T12:52:51Z

    On 2019-Sep-08, Amit Kapila wrote:
    
    > On Thu, Sep 5, 2019 at 2:17 PM Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> wrote:
    > >
    > > Thanks. I hope the attached new patch fixes this issue.
    > *
    > +-- decode infomask flags as human readable flag names
    > +CREATE FUNCTION heap_infomask_flags(
    > +       infomask integer,
    > +       infomask2 integer,
    > +       decode_combined boolean DEFAULT false)
    > +RETURNS text[]
    > +AS 'MODULE_PATHNAME', 'heap_infomask_flags'
    > 
    > Isn't it better to name this function as tuple_infomask_flags or
    > something like that?  The other functions that start their name with
    > heap take page as input.  Also, I think the index-related functions
    > that start with index name take blk/page as input.
    
    I think that other table AMs are not necessarily going to use the same
    infomask flags, so I think we should keep a name that is somehow
    heapam-specific.  Maybe "heapam_infomask_flags" would be okay?
    
    > +     <function>heap_infomask_flags(infomask integer, infomask2
    > integer, decode_combined bool) returns text[]</function>
    
    > I think it is better to use one example for this function as we do for
    > other functions in this doc.
    
    Agreed.
    
    > +     <para>
    > +      If decode_combined is set, combination flags like
    > +      <literal>HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN</literal> are output instead of raw
    > +      flags, <literal>HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED</literal> and
    > +      <literal>HEAP_XMIN_INVALID</literal>. Default value is
    > +      <literal>false</literal>.
    > +     </para>
    > 
    > decode_combined should use parameter marker (like
    > <parameter>decode_combined</parameter>).  Instead of saying
    > "decode_combined" is set, you can use true/false terminology as that
    > is what we use for this parameter.
    
    Agreed.
    
    > Some more comments:
    > *
    > +SELECT t_infomask, t_infomask2, flags
    > +FROM heap_page_items
    > (get_raw_page('test1', 0)),
    > +     LATERAL heap_infomask_flags(t_infomask,
    > t_infomask2, true) m(flags);
    > 
    > Do we really need a LATERAL clause in the above kind of queries?
    > AFAIU, the functions can reference the columns that exist in the FROM
    > list, but I might be missing some point.
    
    I think the spec allows the LATERAL keyword to be implicit in the case
    of functions, so this seems a matter of style.  Putting LATERAL
    explicitly seems slightly clearer, to me.
    
    > +Datum
    > +heap_infomask_flags(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS)
    > +{
    > + uint16 t_infomask = PG_GETARG_INT16(0);
    > + uint16 t_infomask2 = PG_GETARG_INT16(1);
    > + bool decode_combined = PG_GETARG_BOOL(2);
    
    > All the functions in this file are allowed only for superusers and
    > there is an explanation for the same as mentioned in the file header
    > comments.  Is there a reason for this function to be different?
    
    The other functions can crash if fed arbitrary input.  I don't think
    this one can crash, so it seems okay for it not to be superuser-only.
    
    > In any case, if you think that this function needs to behave
    > differently w.r.t superuser privileges, then it is better to add some
    > comments in the function header to explain the same.
    
    Yeah.
    
    > *
    > +Datum
    > +heap_infomask_flags(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS)
    > {
    > ..
    > +
    > + d = (Datum *) palloc0(sizeof(Datum) * bitcnt);
    > 
    > It seems we don't free this memory before leaving this function.  I
    > think it shouldn't be a big problem as this will be normally allocated
    > in ExprContext and shouldn't last for long, but if there is no strong
    > reason, I think it is better to free it.
    
    Agreed.
    
    -- 
    Álvaro Herrera                https://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
    PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services
    
    
    
    
  47. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> — 2019-09-10T02:21:08Z

    On Mon, Sep 9, 2019 at 6:22 PM Alvaro Herrera from 2ndQuadrant
    <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org> wrote:
    >
    > On 2019-Sep-08, Amit Kapila wrote:
    >
    > > On Thu, Sep 5, 2019 at 2:17 PM Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> wrote:
    > > >
    > > > Thanks. I hope the attached new patch fixes this issue.
    > > *
    > > +-- decode infomask flags as human readable flag names
    > > +CREATE FUNCTION heap_infomask_flags(
    > > +       infomask integer,
    > > +       infomask2 integer,
    > > +       decode_combined boolean DEFAULT false)
    > > +RETURNS text[]
    > > +AS 'MODULE_PATHNAME', 'heap_infomask_flags'
    > >
    > > Isn't it better to name this function as tuple_infomask_flags or
    > > something like that?  The other functions that start their name with
    > > heap take page as input.  Also, I think the index-related functions
    > > that start with index name take blk/page as input.
    >
    > I think that other table AMs are not necessarily going to use the same
    > infomask flags, so I think we should keep a name that is somehow
    > heapam-specific.  Maybe "heapam_infomask_flags" would be okay?
    >
    
    It will look bit strange to use heapam as a prefix for this function
    when all others use heap.  I guess if we want to keep it AM specific,
    then the proposed name (heap_infomask_flags) is better or
    alternatively we can consider heap_tuple_infomask_flags?
    
    >
    > > Some more comments:
    > > *
    > > +SELECT t_infomask, t_infomask2, flags
    > > +FROM heap_page_items
    > > (get_raw_page('test1', 0)),
    > > +     LATERAL heap_infomask_flags(t_infomask,
    > > t_infomask2, true) m(flags);
    > >
    > > Do we really need a LATERAL clause in the above kind of queries?
    > > AFAIU, the functions can reference the columns that exist in the FROM
    > > list, but I might be missing some point.
    >
    > I think the spec allows the LATERAL keyword to be implicit in the case
    > of functions, so this seems a matter of style.  Putting LATERAL
    > explicitly seems slightly clearer, to me.
    >
    
    No problem.
    
    > > +Datum
    > > +heap_infomask_flags(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS)
    > > +{
    > > + uint16 t_infomask = PG_GETARG_INT16(0);
    > > + uint16 t_infomask2 = PG_GETARG_INT16(1);
    > > + bool decode_combined = PG_GETARG_BOOL(2);
    >
    > > All the functions in this file are allowed only for superusers and
    > > there is an explanation for the same as mentioned in the file header
    > > comments.  Is there a reason for this function to be different?
    >
    > The other functions can crash if fed arbitrary input.  I don't think
    > this one can crash, so it seems okay for it not to be superuser-only.
    >
    
    At the beginning of pageinspect documentation page, we have a line
    "All of these functions may be used only by superusers.".  We need to
    change that and then maybe give some explanation of why this
    particular function will be allowed to non-superusers.  BTW, do you
    have any use case in mind for the same because anyway we need
    superuser privileges to get the page contents and I think this
    function can't be used independently?
    
    -- 
    With Regards,
    Amit Kapila.
    EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
    
    
    
    
  48. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> — 2019-09-10T02:32:25Z

    On Tue, Sep 10, 2019 at 10:21 AM Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> wrote:
    >
    > On Mon, Sep 9, 2019 at 6:22 PM Alvaro Herrera from 2ndQuadrant
    > <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org> wrote:
    > >
    > > On 2019-Sep-08, Amit Kapila wrote:
    > >
    > > > On Thu, Sep 5, 2019 at 2:17 PM Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> wrote:
    > > > >
    > > > > Thanks. I hope the attached new patch fixes this issue.
    > > > *
    > > > +-- decode infomask flags as human readable flag names
    > > > +CREATE FUNCTION heap_infomask_flags(
    > > > +       infomask integer,
    > > > +       infomask2 integer,
    > > > +       decode_combined boolean DEFAULT false)
    > > > +RETURNS text[]
    > > > +AS 'MODULE_PATHNAME', 'heap_infomask_flags'
    > > >
    > > > Isn't it better to name this function as tuple_infomask_flags or
    > > > something like that?  The other functions that start their name with
    > > > heap take page as input.  Also, I think the index-related functions
    > > > that start with index name take blk/page as input.
    > >
    > > I think that other table AMs are not necessarily going to use the same
    > > infomask flags, so I think we should keep a name that is somehow
    > > heapam-specific.  Maybe "heapam_infomask_flags" would be okay?
    > >
    >
    > It will look bit strange to use heapam as a prefix for this function
    > when all others use heap.  I guess if we want to keep it AM specific,
    > then the proposed name (heap_infomask_flags) is better or
    > alternatively we can consider heap_tuple_infomask_flags?
    
    +1 for heap_tuple_infomask_flags. And do we need to change
    tuple_data_split to heap_tuple_data_split as well because it's also a
    heap specific function?
    
    Regards,
    
    --
    Masahiko Sawada
    NIPPON TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE CORPORATION
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    
    
    
  49. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2019-09-10T02:37:48Z

    On Tue, Sep 10, 2019 at 07:51:08AM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
    > It will look bit strange to use heapam as a prefix for this function
    > when all others use heap.  I guess if we want to keep it AM specific,
    > then the proposed name (heap_infomask_flags) is better or
    > alternatively we can consider heap_tuple_infomask_flags?
    
    Using "heap_" as prefix of the function looks like the best choice to
    me and that's more consistent with the other functions we have
    already.  Using "tuple" looks sensible as well so the last name you are
    proposing sounds like a good alternative.
    
    > At the beginning of pageinspect documentation page, we have a line
    > "All of these functions may be used only by superusers.".  We need to
    > change that and then maybe give some explanation of why this
    > particular function will be allowed to non-superusers.  BTW, do you
    > have any use case in mind for the same because anyway we need
    > superuser privileges to get the page contents and I think this
    > function can't be used independently?
    
    I would still keep it as superuser-restricted, to avoid any risks with
    people playing with the internals of this function.  pageinspect is
    sensitive enough.
    --
    Michael
    
  50. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> — 2019-09-10T02:59:43Z

    On Tue, Sep 10, 2019 at 8:03 AM Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> wrote:
    >
    > On Tue, Sep 10, 2019 at 10:21 AM Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> wrote:
    > >
    > > On Mon, Sep 9, 2019 at 6:22 PM Alvaro Herrera from 2ndQuadrant
    > > <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org> wrote:
    > > > I think that other table AMs are not necessarily going to use the same
    > > > infomask flags, so I think we should keep a name that is somehow
    > > > heapam-specific.  Maybe "heapam_infomask_flags" would be okay?
    > > >
    > >
    > > It will look bit strange to use heapam as a prefix for this function
    > > when all others use heap.  I guess if we want to keep it AM specific,
    > > then the proposed name (heap_infomask_flags) is better or
    > > alternatively we can consider heap_tuple_infomask_flags?
    >
    > +1 for heap_tuple_infomask_flags. And do we need to change
    > tuple_data_split to heap_tuple_data_split as well because it's also a
    > heap specific function?
    >
    
    Good thought, but I think even if we want to change the name of
    tuple_data_split, it might be better done separately.
    
    -- 
    With Regards,
    Amit Kapila.
    EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
    
    
    
    
  51. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2019-09-11T05:45:51Z

    On Tue, Sep 10, 2019 at 08:29:43AM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
    > Good thought, but I think even if we want to change the name of
    > tuple_data_split, it might be better done separately.
    
    Yes, that's not the problem of this patch.  Not sure if it actually
    makes sense either to change it.
    
    The regression tests added are rather unreadable when it comes to
    print a lot of infomask flags.  Could you add at least some unnest()
    calls to the queries using heap_infomask_flags()?  It would make the
    diff lookup much more straight-forward to understand.
    
    It would be good to comment as well what 2816 and 1080 stand for.  The
    current code makes it hard to understand for which purpose this is
    used in the tests.
    
    +      If decode_combined is set, combination flags like
    Missing a markup here.
    
    I am switching the patch as "waiting on author".  Could you address
    the comments raised please?
    --
    Michael
    
  52. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> — 2019-09-11T15:22:45Z

    On Wed, Sep 11, 2019 at 1:46 PM Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote:
    >
    > On Tue, Sep 10, 2019 at 08:29:43AM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
    > > Good thought, but I think even if we want to change the name of
    > > tuple_data_split, it might be better done separately.
    >
    > Yes, that's not the problem of this patch.  Not sure if it actually
    > makes sense either to change it.
    
    Hmm it will be more consistent with other functions but I think we
    would need to increase the pageinspect version to 1.8 and need the new
    sql file to rename the function name. And it will be for PG12, not
    PG13. If we have to do it someday I think it's better to do it in PG12
    that the table AM has been introduced to. Anyway I've attached
    separate patch for it.
    
    >
    > The regression tests added are rather unreadable when it comes to
    > print a lot of infomask flags.  Could you add at least some unnest()
    > calls to the queries using heap_infomask_flags()?  It would make the
    > diff lookup much more straight-forward to understand.
    >
    
    Seems good idea.
    
    > It would be good to comment as well what 2816 and 1080 stand for.  The
    > current code makes it hard to understand for which purpose this is
    > used in the tests.
    
    I've reconsidered and updated the regression tests.
    
    >
    > +      If decode_combined is set, combination flags like
    > Missing a markup here.
    >
    
    Fixed.
    
    I've attached the updated patch that incorporated all comments. I kept
    the function as superuser-restricted.
    
    Regards,
    
    --
    Masahiko Sawada
    NIPPON TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE CORPORATION
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
  53. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org> — 2019-09-11T15:29:57Z

    On 2019-Sep-11, Masahiko Sawada wrote:
    
    > On Wed, Sep 11, 2019 at 1:46 PM Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote:
    > >
    > > On Tue, Sep 10, 2019 at 08:29:43AM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
    > > > Good thought, but I think even if we want to change the name of
    > > > tuple_data_split, it might be better done separately.
    > >
    > > Yes, that's not the problem of this patch.  Not sure if it actually
    > > makes sense either to change it.
    > 
    > Hmm it will be more consistent with other functions but I think we
    > would need to increase the pageinspect version to 1.8 and need the new
    > sql file to rename the function name. And it will be for PG12, not
    > PG13. If we have to do it someday I think it's better to do it in PG12
    > that the table AM has been introduced to. Anyway I've attached
    > separate patch for it.
    
    I'd rather not change the name of the existing function ... that
    function is pretty old (it was introduced in 9.6, commit d6061f83a166).
    I think we can regard that name as an historical accident, and use a
    modern name convention for the new function (and any hypothetical future
    ones) that will, sadly, collide with the historical name for the old
    function.
    
    -- 
    Álvaro Herrera                https://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
    PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services
    
    
    
    
  54. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> — 2019-09-11T15:46:43Z

    On Wed, Sep 11, 2019 at 11:30 PM Alvaro Herrera from 2ndQuadrant
    <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org> wrote:
    >
    > On 2019-Sep-11, Masahiko Sawada wrote:
    >
    > > On Wed, Sep 11, 2019 at 1:46 PM Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote:
    > > >
    > > > On Tue, Sep 10, 2019 at 08:29:43AM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
    > > > > Good thought, but I think even if we want to change the name of
    > > > > tuple_data_split, it might be better done separately.
    > > >
    > > > Yes, that's not the problem of this patch.  Not sure if it actually
    > > > makes sense either to change it.
    > >
    > > Hmm it will be more consistent with other functions but I think we
    > > would need to increase the pageinspect version to 1.8 and need the new
    > > sql file to rename the function name. And it will be for PG12, not
    > > PG13. If we have to do it someday I think it's better to do it in PG12
    > > that the table AM has been introduced to. Anyway I've attached
    > > separate patch for it.
    >
    > I'd rather not change the name of the existing function ... that
    > function is pretty old (it was introduced in 9.6, commit d6061f83a166).
    > I think we can regard that name as an historical accident, and use a
    > modern name convention for the new function (and any hypothetical future
    > ones) that will, sadly, collide with the historical name for the old
    > function.
    
    Okay, that makes sense.
    
    Regards,
    
    --
    Masahiko Sawada
    NIPPON TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE CORPORATION
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    
    
    
  55. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> — 2019-09-12T05:56:47Z

    On Wed, Sep 11, 2019 at 8:53 PM Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> wrote:
    >
    > I've attached the updated patch that incorporated all comments. I kept
    > the function as superuser-restricted.
    >
    
    Thanks for the updated patch.
    
    Few more comments:
    
    *
    + if (!superuser())
    + ereport(ERROR,
    + (errcode
    (ERRCODE_INSUFFICIENT_PRIVILEGE),
    + errmsg("must be superuser to use raw
    page functions")));
    
    I think it is better to use a message like "must be superuser to use
    pageinspect functions" as this function doesn't take raw page as
    input.  If you see other functions like bt_page_items which doesn't
    take raw page as input has the message which I am suggesting.  I can
    see that tuple_data_split also has a similar message as you are
    proposing, but I think that is also not very appropriate.
    
    *
    else
    + {
    + if (HEAP_XMAX_IS_LOCKED_ONLY(t_infomask))
    + d[cnt++] = CStringGetTextDatum
    ("HEAP_XMAX_LOCK_ONLY");
    
    If the idea is that whenever decode_combined flag is false, we will
    display the raw flags set on the tuple, then why to try to interpret
    flags on a tuple in the above case.
    
    *
    + if (decode_combined &&
    + HEAP_LOCKED_UPGRADED(t_infomask))
    + d[cnt++] = CStringGetTextDatum("HEAP_LOCKED_UPGRADED");
    + else
    + {
    + if (HEAP_XMAX_IS_LOCKED_ONLY(t_infomask))
    + d[cnt++] = CStringGetTextDatum
    ("HEAP_XMAX_LOCK_ONLY");
    + if ((t_infomask & HEAP_XMAX_IS_MULTI) != 0)
    + d[cnt++] = CStringGetTextDatum
    ("HEAP_XMAX_IS_MULTI");
    + }
    
    I am not completely sure whether we want to cover HEAP_LOCKED_UPGRADED
    case even when decode_combined flag is set.  It seems this is a bit
    more interpretation of flags than we are doing in other cases.  For
    example, other cases like HEAP_XMAX_SHR_LOCK or HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN are
    the flags that are explicitly set on the tuple so displaying them
    makes sense, but the same is not true for HEAP_LOCKED_UPGRADED.
    
    *
    +CREATE FUNCTION heap_tuple_infomask_flags(
    +       t_infomask integer,
    +       t_infomask2 integer,
    +       decode_combined boolean DEFAULT false)
    
    I am not very happy with the parameter name 'decode_combined'.  It is
    not clear from the name what it means and I think it doesn't even
    match with what we are actually doing here.  How about raw_flags,
    raw_tuple_flags or something like that?
    
    -- 
    With Regards,
    Amit Kapila.
    EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
    
    
    
    
  56. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2019-09-12T06:12:57Z

    On Wed, Sep 11, 2019 at 11:22:45PM +0800, Masahiko Sawada wrote:
    > Hmm it will be more consistent with other functions but I think we
    > would need to increase the pageinspect version to 1.8 and need the new
    > sql file to rename the function name. And it will be for PG12, not
    > PG13. If we have to do it someday I think it's better to do it in PG12
    > that the table AM has been introduced to. Anyway I've attached
    > separate patch for it.
    
    Like Alvaro, I would discard this one for now.
    
    > I've attached the updated patch that incorporated all comments. I kept
    > the function as superuser-restricted.
    
    But not this one.  So committed.  I have gone through the patch and
    adjusted a couple of things in the tests, the docs with weird
    formulations and an example leading mainly to NULLs returned when
    scanning the first page of pg_class.  The tests needed some
    improvements to gain in clarity (no need for unnest with 2 elements,
    added tests for all the combined flags, etc.).  The patch was not
    indented either but this is no big deal.
    
    I hope I forgot to credit nobody in the commit message.  If that's the
    case, you are the winner of a drink of your choice the next time we
    meet.
    --
    Michael
    
  57. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> — 2019-09-12T07:55:03Z

    On Thu, Sep 12, 2019 at 11:43 AM Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote:
    >
    > On Wed, Sep 11, 2019 at 11:22:45PM +0800, Masahiko Sawada wrote:
    > > Hmm it will be more consistent with other functions but I think we
    > > would need to increase the pageinspect version to 1.8 and need the new
    > > sql file to rename the function name. And it will be for PG12, not
    > > PG13. If we have to do it someday I think it's better to do it in PG12
    > > that the table AM has been introduced to. Anyway I've attached
    > > separate patch for it.
    >
    > Like Alvaro, I would discard this one for now.
    >
    > > I've attached the updated patch that incorporated all comments. I kept
    > > the function as superuser-restricted.
    >
    > But not this one.  So committed.
    >
    
    I had a few comments as posted in the previous email which I think we
    can address incrementally as the patch for those is produced.
    However, one point which I am slightly worried is the last one in my
    email.  Are we happy with the name of the new parameter in the API
    decode_combined?  Because if we decide to change that then we need to
    change the exposed API and I think in the ideal case we need to change
    the version as well, but I might be wrong and maybe the parameter name
    as committed is good enough in which case we should be good.
    
    -- 
    With Regards,
    Amit Kapila.
    EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
    
    
    
    
  58. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> — 2019-09-12T09:34:08Z

    On Thu, Sep 12, 2019 at 1:56 PM Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> wrote:
    >
    > On Wed, Sep 11, 2019 at 8:53 PM Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> wrote:
    > >
    > > I've attached the updated patch that incorporated all comments. I kept
    > > the function as superuser-restricted.
    > >
    >
    > Thanks for the updated patch.
    >
    > Few more comments:
    
    Thank you for your comments.
    
    >
    > *
    > + if (!superuser())
    > + ereport(ERROR,
    > + (errcode
    > (ERRCODE_INSUFFICIENT_PRIVILEGE),
    > + errmsg("must be superuser to use raw
    > page functions")));
    >
    > I think it is better to use a message like "must be superuser to use
    > pageinspect functions" as this function doesn't take raw page as
    > input.  If you see other functions like bt_page_items which doesn't
    > take raw page as input has the message which I am suggesting.  I can
    > see that tuple_data_split also has a similar message as you are
    > proposing, but I think that is also not very appropriate.
    
    Agreed. Will fix.
    
    >
    > *
    > else
    > + {
    > + if (HEAP_XMAX_IS_LOCKED_ONLY(t_infomask))
    > + d[cnt++] = CStringGetTextDatum
    > ("HEAP_XMAX_LOCK_ONLY");
    >
    > If the idea is that whenever decode_combined flag is false, we will
    > display the raw flags set on the tuple, then why to try to interpret
    > flags on a tuple in the above case.
    
    Hmm my understanding of 'decode_combined' is to decode the flags that
    we represent by using multiple flags. HEAP_XMAX_IS_LOCKED_ONLY is true
    either if HEAP_XMAX_LOCK_ONLY is set or not a multi and the EXCL_LOCK
    bit is set. That is it requires only one flag. So I thought that it's
    not a combined flag.
    
    >
    > *
    > + if (decode_combined &&
    > + HEAP_LOCKED_UPGRADED(t_infomask))
    > + d[cnt++] = CStringGetTextDatum("HEAP_LOCKED_UPGRADED");
    > + else
    > + {
    > + if (HEAP_XMAX_IS_LOCKED_ONLY(t_infomask))
    > + d[cnt++] = CStringGetTextDatum
    > ("HEAP_XMAX_LOCK_ONLY");
    > + if ((t_infomask & HEAP_XMAX_IS_MULTI) != 0)
    > + d[cnt++] = CStringGetTextDatum
    > ("HEAP_XMAX_IS_MULTI");
    > + }
    >
    > I am not completely sure whether we want to cover HEAP_LOCKED_UPGRADED
    > case even when decode_combined flag is set.  It seems this is a bit
    > more interpretation of flags than we are doing in other cases.  For
    > example, other cases like HEAP_XMAX_SHR_LOCK or HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN are
    > the flags that are explicitly set on the tuple so displaying them
    > makes sense, but the same is not true for HEAP_LOCKED_UPGRADED.
    >
    
    I thought it would be better to interpret it as much as possible,
    especially for diagnostic use cases. I'm concerned that user might not
    be able to get enough information for investigation if we
    intentionally filtered particular flags.
    
    > *
    > +CREATE FUNCTION heap_tuple_infomask_flags(
    > +       t_infomask integer,
    > +       t_infomask2 integer,
    > +       decode_combined boolean DEFAULT false)
    >
    > I am not very happy with the parameter name 'decode_combined'.  It is
    > not clear from the name what it means and I think it doesn't even
    > match with what we are actually doing here.  How about raw_flags,
    > raw_tuple_flags or something like that?
    >
    
    raw_flags might be more straightforward. Or perhaps the third idea
    could be show_raw_flags? If other hackers agree to change the flag
    name I'll fix it.
    
    I'll submit the patch to fix the commit after we got a consensus on
    the above changes.
    
    
    
    Regards,
    
    --
    Masahiko Sawada
    NIPPON TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE CORPORATION
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    
    
    
  59. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2019-09-12T11:18:44Z

    On Thu, Sep 12, 2019 at 05:34:08PM +0800, Masahiko Sawada wrote:
    > On Thu, Sep 12, 2019 at 1:56 PM Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> wrote:
    >> I think it is better to use a message like "must be superuser to use
    >> pageinspect functions" as this function doesn't take raw page as
    >> input.  If you see other functions like bt_page_items which doesn't
    >> take raw page as input has the message which I am suggesting.  I can
    >> see that tuple_data_split also has a similar message as you are
    >> proposing, but I think that is also not very appropriate.
    > 
    > Agreed. Will fix.
    
    Well, those functions are all able to work only from data of a raw
    page, so the existing message was actually fine by me.  If you want to
    change it this way, I don't see either any arguments against.
    
    > Hmm my understanding of 'decode_combined' is to decode the flags that
    > we represent by using multiple flags. HEAP_XMAX_IS_LOCKED_ONLY is true
    > either if HEAP_XMAX_LOCK_ONLY is set or not a multi and the EXCL_LOCK
    > bit is set. That is it requires only one flag. So I thought that it's
    > not a combined flag.
    
    Same interpretation here.
    
    >> I am not completely sure whether we want to cover HEAP_LOCKED_UPGRADED
    >> case even when decode_combined flag is set.  It seems this is a bit
    >> more interpretation of flags than we are doing in other cases.  For
    >> example, other cases like HEAP_XMAX_SHR_LOCK or HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN are
    >> the flags that are explicitly set on the tuple so displaying them
    >> makes sense, but the same is not true for HEAP_LOCKED_UPGRADED.
    > 
    > I thought it would be better to interpret it as much as possible,
    > especially for diagnostic use cases. I'm concerned that user might not
    > be able to get enough information for investigation if we
    > intentionally filtered particular flags.
    
    For HEAP_LOCKED_UPGRADED, my interpretation was that the current code
    is correct to understand it as a decomposition of HEAP_XMAX_IS_MULTI
    and HEAP_XMAX_LOCK_ONLY, still...
    
    It seems to me that the way we define combined flags is subject to
    a lot of interpretation.  Honestly, if we cannot come up with a clear
    definition of what should be combined or not, I would be of the
    opinion to just wipe out the option, and just return in the text array
    the bits which are set.  It has been discussed on the thread that it
    would be confusing to not show combined flags to some users as some
    bits set have rather contrary meaning when set with others.  We tell
    the user that all the flag details are defined in htup_details.h in
    the code and the documentation so the information is not in the
    returned data, but in the code.  And I would like to think that users
    of pageinspect are knowledgeable enough about Postgres that they would
    likely never use decode_combined = true.  Likely I am outnumbered
    regarding this point, so I won't push hard on it, still I get that the
    confusion does not come from this module, but in the way the code
    combines and names all the bits for the infomasks :)
    
    And there would be the argument to not use HEAP_XMAX_IS_LOCKED_ONLY()
    in the code.
    
    >> I am not very happy with the parameter name 'decode_combined'.  It is
    >> not clear from the name what it means and I think it doesn't even
    >> match with what we are actually doing here.  How about raw_flags,
    >> raw_tuple_flags or something like that?
    >>
    > 
    > raw_flags might be more straightforward. Or perhaps the third idea
    > could be show_raw_flags? If other hackers agree to change the flag
    > name I'll fix it.
    > 
    > I'll submit the patch to fix the commit after we got a consensus on
    > the above changes.
    
    decode_combined sounds like a good compromise to me.  If there is a
    better consensus, well, let's use it, but I don't find those
    suggestions to be improvements.
    --
    Michael
    
  60. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> — 2019-09-12T11:54:17Z

    On Thu, Sep 12, 2019 at 4:48 PM Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote:
    >
    > On Thu, Sep 12, 2019 at 05:34:08PM +0800, Masahiko Sawada wrote:
    > > On Thu, Sep 12, 2019 at 1:56 PM Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> wrote:
    > >> I think it is better to use a message like "must be superuser to use
    > >> pageinspect functions" as this function doesn't take raw page as
    > >> input.  If you see other functions like bt_page_items which doesn't
    > >> take raw page as input has the message which I am suggesting.  I can
    > >> see that tuple_data_split also has a similar message as you are
    > >> proposing, but I think that is also not very appropriate.
    > >
    > > Agreed. Will fix.
    >
    > Well, those functions are all able to work only from data of a raw
    > page, so the existing message was actually fine by me.  If you want to
    > change it this way, I don't see either any arguments against.
    >
    > > Hmm my understanding of 'decode_combined' is to decode the flags that
    > > we represent by using multiple flags. HEAP_XMAX_IS_LOCKED_ONLY is true
    > > either if HEAP_XMAX_LOCK_ONLY is set or not a multi and the EXCL_LOCK
    > > bit is set. That is it requires only one flag. So I thought that it's
    > > not a combined flag.
    >
    > Same interpretation here.
    >
    
    Hmm, I thought when decode_combined flag is set to false means we will
    display the raw flags set on the tuple without any further
    interpretation.  I think that is what is most people in thread
    advocated about.
    
    > >> I am not completely sure whether we want to cover HEAP_LOCKED_UPGRADED
    > >> case even when decode_combined flag is set.  It seems this is a bit
    > >> more interpretation of flags than we are doing in other cases.  For
    > >> example, other cases like HEAP_XMAX_SHR_LOCK or HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN are
    > >> the flags that are explicitly set on the tuple so displaying them
    > >> makes sense, but the same is not true for HEAP_LOCKED_UPGRADED.
    > >
    > > I thought it would be better to interpret it as much as possible,
    > > especially for diagnostic use cases. I'm concerned that user might not
    > > be able to get enough information for investigation if we
    > > intentionally filtered particular flags.
    >
    > For HEAP_LOCKED_UPGRADED, my interpretation was that the current code
    > is correct to understand it as a decomposition of HEAP_XMAX_IS_MULTI
    > and HEAP_XMAX_LOCK_ONLY, still...
    >
    > It seems to me that the way we define combined flags is subject to
    > a lot of interpretation.
    >
    
    Right.
    
    >  Honestly, if we cannot come up with a clear
    > definition of what should be combined or not, I would be of the
    > opinion to just wipe out the option, and just return in the text array
    > the bits which are set.  It has been discussed on the thread that it
    > would be confusing to not show combined flags to some users as some
    > bits set have rather contrary meaning when set with others.
    >
    
    Yes, I think we could have more discussion on this point.  It is not
    100% clear how we should interpret this flag and or where to draw a
    line.  It might be that whatever we have done is alright, but still,
    it is worth more discussion and opinion from a few more people.
    
    > We tell
    > the user that all the flag details are defined in htup_details.h in
    > the code and the documentation so the information is not in the
    > returned data, but in the code.  And I would like to think that users
    > of pageinspect are knowledgeable enough about Postgres that they would
    > likely never use decode_combined = true.  Likely I am outnumbered
    > regarding this point, so I won't push hard on it, still I get that the
    > confusion does not come from this module, but in the way the code
    > combines and names all the bits for the infomasks :)
    >
    > And there would be the argument to not use HEAP_XMAX_IS_LOCKED_ONLY()
    > in the code.
    >
    > >> I am not very happy with the parameter name 'decode_combined'.  It is
    > >> not clear from the name what it means and I think it doesn't even
    > >> match with what we are actually doing here.  How about raw_flags,
    > >> raw_tuple_flags or something like that?
    > >>
    > >
    > > raw_flags might be more straightforward. Or perhaps the third idea
    > > could be show_raw_flags? If other hackers agree to change the flag
    > > name I'll fix it.
    > >
    > > I'll submit the patch to fix the commit after we got a consensus on
    > > the above changes.
    >
    > decode_combined sounds like a good compromise to me.  If there is a
    > better consensus, well, let's use it, but I don't find those
    > suggestions to be improvements.
    >
    
    I think it depends on the meaning of that flag.
    
    -- 
    With Regards,
    Amit Kapila.
    EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
    
    
    
    
  61. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2019-09-13T03:30:41Z

    On Thu, Sep 12, 2019 at 05:24:17PM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
    > On Thu, Sep 12, 2019 at 4:48 PM Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote:
    > Hmm, I thought when decode_combined flag is set to false means we will
    > display the raw flags set on the tuple without any further
    > interpretation.  I think that is what is most people in thread
    > advocated about.
    
    Sorry if I created any confusion.  When set to false then the raw list
    of flags is returned, and that's the default.  The example provided in
    the docs is careful about that, as well as the description done for
    the option (at least I guess so!).
    
    > Yes, I think we could have more discussion on this point.  It is not
    > 100% clear how we should interpret this flag and or where to draw a
    > line.  It might be that whatever we have done is alright, but still,
    > it is worth more discussion and opinion from a few more people.
    
    Of course.
    
    >> decode_combined sounds like a good compromise to me.  If there is a
    >> better consensus, well, let's use it, but I don't find those
    >> suggestions to be improvements.
    > 
    > I think it depends on the meaning of that flag.
    
    Perhaps using "decode" is the confusing part here?  It is more like a
    "merge" of the flags, or just a combination of them.  An idea that
    just popped here would be to name the switch "combine_flags" instead.
    --
    Michael
    
  62. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> — 2019-09-13T04:29:40Z

    On Fri, Sep 13, 2019 at 9:00 AM Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote:
    >
    > On Thu, Sep 12, 2019 at 05:24:17PM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
    > > On Thu, Sep 12, 2019 at 4:48 PM Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote:
    > > Hmm, I thought when decode_combined flag is set to false means we will
    > > display the raw flags set on the tuple without any further
    > > interpretation.  I think that is what is most people in thread
    > > advocated about.
    >
    > Sorry if I created any confusion.  When set to false then the raw list
    > of flags is returned, and that's the default.
    >
    
    I think that is what we have not done in one of the cases pointed by me.
    
    -- 
    With Regards,
    Amit Kapila.
    EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
    
    
    
    
  63. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2019-09-13T05:12:22Z

    On Fri, Sep 13, 2019 at 09:59:40AM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
    > I think that is what we have not done in one of the cases pointed by me.
    
    Thinking more about it, I see your point now.  HEAP_LOCKED_UPGRADED is
    not a direct combination of the other flags and depends on other
    conditions, so we cannot make a combination of it with other things.
    The three others don't have that problem.
    
    Attached is a patch to fix your suggestions.  This also removes the
    use of HEAP_XMAX_IS_LOCKED_ONLY which did not make completely sense
    either as a "raw" flag.  While on it, the order of the flags can be
    improved to match more the order of htup_details.h
    
    Does this patch address your concerns?
    --
    Michael
    
  64. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-09-13T11:49:50Z

    On 2019-Sep-13, Michael Paquier wrote:
    
    > Attached is a patch to fix your suggestions.  This also removes the
    > use of HEAP_XMAX_IS_LOCKED_ONLY which did not make completely sense
    > either as a "raw" flag.  While on it, the order of the flags can be
    > improved to match more the order of htup_details.h
    
    A thought I had as I fell asleep last night is to include the derivate
    flags in a separate output column altogether.  So
    heap_tuple_infomask_flags() could be made to return two columns, one
    with the straight one-flag-per-bit, and another one with the compound
    flags.  That way we always have the raw ones available, and we avoid any
    confusion about strange cases such as LOCK_UPGRADED and IS_LOCKED_ONLY.
    
    -- 
    Álvaro Herrera                https://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
    PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services
    
    
    
    
  65. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> — 2019-09-14T03:55:31Z

    On Fri, Sep 13, 2019 at 5:31 PM Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    >
    > On 2019-Sep-13, Michael Paquier wrote:
    >
    > > Attached is a patch to fix your suggestions.  This also removes the
    > > use of HEAP_XMAX_IS_LOCKED_ONLY which did not make completely sense
    > > either as a "raw" flag.  While on it, the order of the flags can be
    > > improved to match more the order of htup_details.h
    >
    > A thought I had as I fell asleep last night is to include the derivate
    > flags in a separate output column altogether.  So
    > heap_tuple_infomask_flags() could be made to return two columns, one
    > with the straight one-flag-per-bit, and another one with the compound
    > flags.
    >
    
    So, in most cases, the compound column will be empty, but in some
    cases like HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN, HEAP_XMAX_SHR_LOCK, etc. the flag will be
    displayed.  I like this idea though it will be a bit of noise in some
    cases but it is neat.  Another benefit is that one doesn't need to
    invoke this function twice to see the compound flags.
    
    >  That way we always have the raw ones available, and we avoid any
    > confusion about strange cases such as LOCK_UPGRADED and IS_LOCKED_ONLY.
    >
    
    Yeah, but I am not sure if we want to do display LOCK_UPGRADED stuff
    in the compound column as that is not directly comparable to other
    flags we want to display there like HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN,
    HEAP_XMAX_SHR_LOCK.
    
    -- 
    With Regards,
    Amit Kapila.
    EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
    
    
    
    
  66. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> — 2019-09-14T04:21:33Z

    On Fri, Sep 13, 2019 at 10:42 AM Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote:
    >
    > On Fri, Sep 13, 2019 at 09:59:40AM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
    > > I think that is what we have not done in one of the cases pointed by me.
    >
    > Thinking more about it, I see your point now.  HEAP_LOCKED_UPGRADED is
    > not a direct combination of the other flags and depends on other
    > conditions, so we cannot make a combination of it with other things.
    > The three others don't have that problem.
    >
    > Attached is a patch to fix your suggestions.  This also removes the
    > use of HEAP_XMAX_IS_LOCKED_ONLY which did not make completely sense
    > either as a "raw" flag.  While on it, the order of the flags can be
    > improved to match more the order of htup_details.h
    >
    > Does this patch address your concerns?
    >
    
    Yeah, but I think we should also try to see what we want to do about
    'decode_combined' flag-related point, maybe we can adapt to what
    Alvaro has purposed?
    
    -- 
    With Regards,
    Amit Kapila.
    EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
    
    
    
    
  67. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2019-09-14T04:32:08Z

    On Sat, Sep 14, 2019 at 09:51:33AM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
    > Yeah, but I think we should also try to see what we want to do about
    > 'decode_combined' flag-related point, maybe we can adapt to what
    > Alvaro has purposed?
    
    Thanks, I'll keep note of this patch.  I was just going to comment on
    the other point raised :)
    --
    Michael
    
  68. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2019-09-14T04:40:38Z

    On Sat, Sep 14, 2019 at 09:25:31AM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
    > On Fri, Sep 13, 2019 at 5:31 PM Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    >> A thought I had as I fell asleep last night is to include the derivate
    >> flags in a separate output column altogether.  So
    >> heap_tuple_infomask_flags() could be made to return two columns, one
    >> with the straight one-flag-per-bit, and another one with the compound
    >> flags.
    > 
    > So, in most cases, the compound column will be empty, but in some
    > cases like HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN, HEAP_XMAX_SHR_LOCK, etc. the flag will be
    > displayed.  I like this idea though it will be a bit of noise in some
    > cases but it is neat.  Another benefit is that one doesn't need to
    > invoke this function twice to see the compound flags.
    
    Hmmm.  Doesn't it become less user-friendly to invoke the function
    then?  You would need to pass it down to the FROM clause after
    fetching the raw page and then parsing its tuple items to have
    t_infomask and t_infomask2 passed down as arguments to the new
    function.  The one-column version has the advantage to be more
    consistent with tuple_data_split() after getting all the values parsed
    by heap_page_items().
    
    >>  That way we always have the raw ones available, and we avoid any
    >> confusion about strange cases such as LOCK_UPGRADED and IS_LOCKED_ONLY.
    > 
    > Yeah, but I am not sure if we want to do display LOCK_UPGRADED stuff
    > in the compound column as that is not directly comparable to other
    > flags we want to display there like HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN,
    > HEAP_XMAX_SHR_LOCK.
    
    Yep, I agree that this one ought to not be considered as a proper
    combination.  The other three ones are fine though.
    --
    Michael
    
  69. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> — 2019-09-14T05:48:37Z

    On Sat, Sep 14, 2019 at 10:10 AM Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote:
    >
    > On Sat, Sep 14, 2019 at 09:25:31AM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
    > > On Fri, Sep 13, 2019 at 5:31 PM Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > >> A thought I had as I fell asleep last night is to include the derivate
    > >> flags in a separate output column altogether.  So
    > >> heap_tuple_infomask_flags() could be made to return two columns, one
    > >> with the straight one-flag-per-bit, and another one with the compound
    > >> flags.
    > >
    > > So, in most cases, the compound column will be empty, but in some
    > > cases like HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN, HEAP_XMAX_SHR_LOCK, etc. the flag will be
    > > displayed.  I like this idea though it will be a bit of noise in some
    > > cases but it is neat.  Another benefit is that one doesn't need to
    > > invoke this function twice to see the compound flags.
    >
    > Hmmm.  Doesn't it become less user-friendly to invoke the function
    > then?  You would need to pass it down to the FROM clause after
    > fetching the raw page and then parsing its tuple items to have
    > t_infomask and t_infomask2 passed down as arguments to the new
    > function.  The one-column version has the advantage to be more
    > consistent with tuple_data_split() after getting all the values parsed
    > by heap_page_items().
    >
    
    Won't 'Lateral' clause be helpful here as the patch contains it in one
    of its tests?
    
    -- 
    With Regards,
    Amit Kapila.
    EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
    
    
    
    
  70. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2019-09-14T06:03:57Z

    On Sat, Sep 14, 2019 at 11:18:37AM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
    > Won't 'Lateral' clause be helpful here as the patch contains it in one
    > of its tests?
    
    Ah true, I forgot that.
    --
    Michael
    
  71. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2019-09-14T09:30:02Z

    On Sat, Sep 14, 2019 at 03:03:57PM +0900, Michael Paquier wrote:
    > On Sat, Sep 14, 2019 at 11:18:37AM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
    >> Won't 'Lateral' clause be helpful here as the patch contains it in one
    >> of its tests?
    > 
    > Ah true, I forgot that.
    
    If we are redesigning the interface, here are two extra thoughts which
    may be worth considering:
    1) If the function returns multiple columns, could it make sense to
    separate infomask and infomask2?  This would then give 3 columns:
    - The raw flags for infomask.
    - The three combined flags for infomask.
    - The flags for infomask2.
    2) Could it make sense to have a separate function for infomask2?
    
    I'd rather keep everything in a single function, still as we are
    discussing the matter..
    --
    Michael
    
  72. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> — 2019-09-16T06:16:16Z

    On Sat, Sep 14, 2019 at 3:00 PM Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote:
    >
    > On Sat, Sep 14, 2019 at 03:03:57PM +0900, Michael Paquier wrote:
    > > On Sat, Sep 14, 2019 at 11:18:37AM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
    > >> Won't 'Lateral' clause be helpful here as the patch contains it in one
    > >> of its tests?
    > >
    > > Ah true, I forgot that.
    >
    > If we are redesigning the interface, here are two extra thoughts which
    > may be worth considering:
    > 1) If the function returns multiple columns, could it make sense to
    > separate infomask and infomask2?  This would then give 3 columns:
    > - The raw flags for infomask.
    > - The three combined flags for infomask.
    > - The flags for infomask2.
    > 2) Could it make sense to have a separate function for infomask2?
    >
    
    I don't see much use of separating information for infomask and infomask2.
    
    -- 
    With Regards,
    Amit Kapila.
    EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
    
    
    
    
  73. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2019-09-16T13:40:56Z

    On Mon, Sep 16, 2019 at 11:46:16AM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
    > I don't see much use of separating information for infomask and infomask2.
    
    Okay, using two separate columns leads to the attached.  Any thoughts?
    This also includes a fix for cases with IS_LOCKED_ONLY and UPGRADED.
    --
    Michael
    
  74. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-09-16T14:11:06Z

    On 2019-Sep-16, Michael Paquier wrote:
    
    > On Mon, Sep 16, 2019 at 11:46:16AM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
    > > I don't see much use of separating information for infomask and infomask2.
    > 
    > Okay, using two separate columns leads to the attached.  Any thoughts?
    > This also includes a fix for cases with IS_LOCKED_ONLY and UPGRADED.
    
    I like how it looks in the expected test output.  Didn't review the code
    closely, but it looks reasonable in a quick glance.
    
    Whitespace nitpick: pgindent will do something very annoying with this:
    
    > +		PG_RETURN_DATUM(
    > +			HeapTupleGetDatum(heap_form_tuple(tupdesc, values, nulls)));
    
    I suggest to split the line in the first comma, not in the parens.
    
    > +      Combined flags include for example <literal>HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN</literal>
    > +      which is defined as a set of <literal>HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED</literal>
    > +      and <literal>HEAP_XMIN_INVALID</literal>.
    
    I suggest something like "Combined flags are displayed for source-level
    macros that take into account the value of more than one raw bit, such
    as HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN".  (We probably don't want an exhaustive list, which
    becomes annoying to maintain; users can refer to the source file.)
    
    There's a typo "bites" in a comment.
    
    -- 
    Álvaro Herrera                https://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
    PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services
    
    
    
    
  75. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2019-09-17T00:44:17Z

    On Mon, Sep 16, 2019 at 11:11:06AM -0300, Alvaro Herrera wrote:
    > On 2019-Sep-16, Michael Paquier wrote:
    >> On Mon, Sep 16, 2019 at 11:46:16AM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
    >> Okay, using two separate columns leads to the attached.  Any thoughts?
    >> This also includes a fix for cases with IS_LOCKED_ONLY and UPGRADED.
    > 
    > I like how it looks in the expected test output.  Didn't review the code
    > closely, but it looks reasonable in a quick glance.
    
    Thanks for the review.
    
    > Whitespace nitpick: pgindent will do something very annoying with
    > this:
    >
    >> +		PG_RETURN_DATUM(
    >> +			HeapTupleGetDatum(heap_form_tuple(tupdesc, values, nulls)));
    > 
    > I suggest to split the line in the first comma, not in the parens.
    
    Indeed.  I am switching to use a HeapTuple as intermediate step
    instead.
    
    >> +      Combined flags include for example <literal>HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN</literal>
    >> +      which is defined as a set of <literal>HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED</literal>
    >> +      and <literal>HEAP_XMIN_INVALID</literal>.
    > 
    > I suggest something like "Combined flags are displayed for source-level
    > macros that take into account the value of more than one raw bit, such
    > as HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN".  (We probably don't want an exhaustive list, which
    > becomes annoying to maintain; users can refer to the source file.)
    
    Yes, I didn't want to provide a list for that exact reason, and your
    suggestion of change sounds fine to me.
    
    > There's a typo "bites" in a comment.
    
    Thanks, fixed.
    
    Amit, what do you think?  Does the patch match with what you have in
    mind?
    --
    Michael
    
  76. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> — 2019-09-17T03:53:45Z

    On Tue, Sep 17, 2019 at 6:14 AM Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote:
    >
    > On Mon, Sep 16, 2019 at 11:11:06AM -0300, Alvaro Herrera wrote:
    > > On 2019-Sep-16, Michael Paquier wrote:
    >
    > Thanks, fixed.
    >
    > Amit, what do you think?  Does the patch match with what you have in
    > mind?
    >
    
    *
     CREATE FUNCTION heap_tuple_infomask_flags(
            t_infomask integer,
            t_infomask2 integer,
    -       decode_combined boolean DEFAULT false)
    -RETURNS text[]
    +       raw_flags OUT text[],
    +       combined_flags OUT text[])
    +RETURNS SETOF record
    
    We always return a single tuple/record from this function, so do we
    really need to return SETOF record or just returning record is
    sufficient?
    
    *
    + pfree(flags);
    + values[0] = PointerGetDatum(a);
    
    - pfree(d);
    + /*
    + * Build set of combined flags.  Use the same size as previously for the
    + * allocation, this likely wastes a couple of bytes but it keeps the code
    + * simple.
    + */
    + cnt = 0;
    + flags = (Datum *) palloc0(sizeof(Datum) * bitcnt);
    
    If you want to use the same size array, then you might want to just
    memset the previous array rather than first freeing it and then again
    allocating it.  This is not a big point, so any which way is fine.
    
    -- 
    With Regards,
    Amit Kapila.
    EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
    
    
    
    
  77. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2019-09-17T04:06:18Z

    On Tue, Sep 17, 2019 at 09:23:45AM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
    > We always return a single tuple/record from this function, so do we
    > really need to return SETOF record or just returning record is
    > sufficient?
    
    Right (with the doc update).
    
    > If you want to use the same size array, then you might want to just
    > memset the previous array rather than first freeing it and then again
    > allocating it.  This is not a big point, so any which way is fine.
    
    Sure.  This is less expensive though, so changed it the way you
    are suggesting on my local branch.
    --
    Michael
    
  78. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2019-09-18T01:37:27Z

    On Tue, Sep 17, 2019 at 01:06:18PM +0900, Michael Paquier wrote:
    > On Tue, Sep 17, 2019 at 09:23:45AM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
    >> If you want to use the same size array, then you might want to just
    >> memset the previous array rather than first freeing it and then again
    >> allocating it.  This is not a big point, so any which way is fine.
    > 
    > Sure.  This is less expensive though, so changed it the way you
    > are suggesting on my local branch.
    
    I am attaching an updated patch for now that I would like to commit.
    Are there more comments about the shape of the patch, the name of the
    columns for the function, etc.?
    --
    Michael
    
  79. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2019-09-19T02:04:22Z

    On Wed, Sep 18, 2019 at 10:37:27AM +0900, Michael Paquier wrote:
    > I am attaching an updated patch for now that I would like to commit.
    > Are there more comments about the shape of the patch, the name of the
    > columns for the function, etc.?
    
    Okay, I have done an extra round of review, and committed it.
    --
    Michael
    
  80. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> — 2019-09-19T02:52:04Z

    On Thu, Sep 19, 2019 at 7:34 AM Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote:
    >
    > On Wed, Sep 18, 2019 at 10:37:27AM +0900, Michael Paquier wrote:
    > > I am attaching an updated patch for now that I would like to commit.
    > > Are there more comments about the shape of the patch, the name of the
    > > columns for the function, etc.?
    >
    > Okay, I have done an extra round of review, and committed it.
    >
    
    Thanks.  I was about to have a look today, but anyway I checked the
    committed patch and it looks fine.
    
    -- 
    With Regards,
    Amit Kapila.
    EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
    
    
    
    
  81. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2019-09-20T02:25:48Z

    On Thu, Sep 19, 2019 at 08:22:04AM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
    > Thanks.  I was about to have a look today, but anyway I checked the
    > committed patch and it looks fine.
    
    Thanks Amit for double-checking.
    --
    Michael
    
  82. Re: [HACKERS] [PATCH] pageinspect function to decode infomasks

    Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-11-10T09:49:26Z

    On Thu, 19 Sep 2019 at 10:04, Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote:
    
    > On Wed, Sep 18, 2019 at 10:37:27AM +0900, Michael Paquier wrote:
    > > I am attaching an updated patch for now that I would like to commit.
    > > Are there more comments about the shape of the patch, the name of the
    > > columns for the function, etc.?
    >
    > Okay, I have done an extra round of review, and committed it.
    
    
    Thanks very much. That'll make life easier when debugging corruptions.
    
    
    -- 
     Craig Ringer                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     2ndQuadrant - PostgreSQL Solutions for the Enterprise