Release date: 2005-01-19
Major changes in this release:
This is the first PostgreSQL release to run natively on Microsoft Windows® as a server. It can run as a Windows service. This release supports NT-based Windows releases like Windows 2000 SP4, Windows XP, and Windows 2003. Older releases like Windows 95, Windows 98, and Windows ME are not supported because these operating systems do not have the infrastructure to support PostgreSQL. A separate installer project has been created to ease installation on Windows — see http://www.postgresql.org/ftp/win32/.
Although tested throughout our release cycle, the Windows port does not have the benefit of years of use in production environments that PostgreSQL has on Unix platforms. Therefore it should be treated with the same level of caution as you would a new product.
Previous releases required the Unix emulation toolkit Cygwin in order to run the server on Windows operating systems. PostgreSQL has supported native clients on Windows for many years.
Savepoints allow specific parts of a transaction to be aborted without affecting the remainder of the transaction. Prior releases had no such capability; there was no way to recover from a statement failure within a transaction except by aborting the whole transaction. This feature is valuable for application writers who require error recovery within a complex transaction.
In previous releases there was no way to recover from disk drive failure except to restore from a previous backup or use a standby replication server. Point-in-time recovery allows continuous backup of the server. You can recover either to the point of failure or to some transaction in the past.
Tablespaces allow administrators to select different file systems for storage of individual tables, indexes, and databases. This improves performance and control over disk space usage. Prior releases used initlocation and manual symlink management for such tasks.
CHECKPOINT
,
VACUUM
This release has a more intelligent buffer replacement strategy, which will make better use of available shared buffers and improve performance. The performance impact of vacuum and checkpoints is also lessened.
A column's data type can now be changed with ALTER
TABLE
.
A new version of the plperl server-side language now supports a persistent shared storage area, triggers, returning records and arrays of records, and SPI calls to access the database.
COPY
COPY
can now read and write
comma-separated-value files. It has the flexibility to
interpret nonstandard quoting and separation characters too.
A dump/restore using pg_dump is required for those wishing to migrate data from any previous release.
Observe the following incompatibilities:
In READ COMMITTED
serialization mode, volatile functions
now see the results of concurrent transactions committed up to the
beginning of each statement within the function, rather than up to the
beginning of the interactive command that called the function.
Functions declared STABLE
or IMMUTABLE
always
use the snapshot of the calling query, and therefore do not see the
effects of actions taken after the calling query starts, whether in
their own transaction or other transactions. Such a function must be
read-only, too, meaning that it cannot use any SQL commands other than
SELECT
.
Nondeferred AFTER
triggers are now fired immediately
after completion of the triggering query, rather than upon
finishing the current interactive command. This makes a
difference when the triggering query occurred within a function:
the trigger is invoked before the function proceeds to its next
operation.
Server configuration parameters virtual_host
and
tcpip_socket
have been replaced with a more general
parameter listen_addresses
. Also, the server now listens on
localhost
by default, which eliminates the need for the
-i
postmaster switch in many scenarios.
Server configuration parameters SortMem
and
VacuumMem
have been renamed to work_mem
and maintenance_work_mem
to better reflect their
use. The original names are still supported in
SET
and SHOW
.
Server configuration parameters log_pid
,
log_timestamp
, and log_source_port
have been
replaced with a more general parameter log_line_prefix
.
Server configuration parameter syslog
has been
replaced with a more logical log_destination
variable to
control the log output destination.
Server configuration parameter log_statement
has been
changed so it can selectively log just database modification or
data definition statements. Server configuration parameter
log_duration
now prints only when log_statement
prints the query.
Server configuration parameter max_expr_depth
parameter has
been replaced with max_stack_depth
which measures the
physical stack size rather than the expression nesting depth. This
helps prevent session termination due to stack overflow caused by
recursive functions.
The length()
function no longer counts trailing spaces in
CHAR(n)
values.
Casting an integer to BIT(N)
selects the rightmost N bits of the
integer, not the leftmost N bits as before.
Updating an element or slice of a NULL array value now produces a nonnull array result, namely an array containing just the assigned-to positions.
Syntax checking of array input values has been tightened up
considerably. Junk that was previously allowed in odd places with
odd results now causes an error. Empty-string element values
must now be written as ""
, rather than writing nothing.
Also changed behavior with respect to whitespace surrounding
array elements: trailing whitespace is now ignored, for symmetry
with leading whitespace (which has always been ignored).
Overflow in integer arithmetic operations is now detected and reported as an error.
The arithmetic operators associated with the single-byte
"char"
data type have been removed.
The extract()
function (also called
date_part
) now returns the proper year for BC dates.
It previously returned one less than the correct year. The
function now also returns the proper values for millennium and
century.
CIDR
values now must have their nonmasked bits be zero.
For example, we no longer allow
204.248.199.1/31
as a CIDR
value. Such
values should never have been accepted by
PostgreSQL and will now be rejected.
EXECUTE
now returns a completion tag that
matches the executed statement.
psql's \copy
command now reads or
writes to the query's stdin/stdout
, rather than
psql's stdin/stdout
. The previous
behavior can be accessed via new
pstdin
/pstdout
parameters.
The JDBC client interface has been removed from the core distribution, and is now hosted at http://jdbc.postgresql.org.
The Tcl client interface has also been removed. There are several Tcl interfaces now hosted at http://gborg.postgresql.org.
The server now uses its own time zone database, rather than the
one supplied by the operating system. This will provide consistent
behavior across all platforms. In most cases, there should be
little noticeable difference in time zone behavior, except that
the time zone names used by SET
/SHOW
TimeZone
might be different from what your platform provides.
Configure's threading option no longer requires users to run tests or edit configuration files; threading options are now detected automatically.
Now that tablespaces have been implemented, initlocation has been removed.
The API for user-defined GiST indexes has been changed. The
Union and PickSplit methods are now passed a pointer to a
special GistEntryVector
structure,
rather than a bytea
.
Some aspects of PostgreSQL's behavior have been determined to be suboptimal. For the sake of backward compatibility these have not been removed in 8.0, but they are considered deprecated and will be removed in the next major release.
The 8.1 release will remove the to_char()
function
for intervals.
The server now warns of empty strings passed to
oid
/float4
/float8
data
types, but continues to interpret them as zeroes as before.
In the next major release, empty strings will be considered
invalid input for these data types.
By default, tables in PostgreSQL 8.0
and earlier are created with OID
s. In the next release,
this will not be the case: to create a table
that contains OID
s, the WITH OIDS
clause must
be specified or the default_with_oids
configuration parameter must be set. Users are encouraged to
explicitly specify WITH OIDS
if their tables
require OIDs for compatibility with future releases of
PostgreSQL.
Below you will find a detailed account of the changes between release 8.0 and the previous major release.
Support cross-data-type index usage (Tom)
Before this change, many queries would not use an index if the data types did not match exactly. This improvement makes index usage more intuitive and consistent.
New buffer replacement strategy that improves caching (Jan)
Prior releases used a least-recently-used (LRU) cache to keep recently referenced pages in memory. The LRU algorithm did not consider the number of times a specific cache entry was accessed, so large table scans could force out useful cache pages. The new cache algorithm uses four separate lists to track most recently used and most frequently used cache pages and dynamically optimize their replacement based on the work load. This should lead to much more efficient use of the shared buffer cache. Administrators who have tested shared buffer sizes in the past should retest with this new cache replacement policy.
Add subprocess to write dirty buffers periodically to reduce checkpoint writes (Jan)
In previous releases, the checkpoint process, which runs every few
minutes, would write all dirty buffers to the operating system's
buffer cache then flush all dirty operating system buffers to
disk. This resulted in a periodic spike in disk usage that often
hurt performance. The new code uses a background writer to trickle
disk writes at a steady pace so checkpoints have far fewer dirty
pages to write to disk. Also, the new code does not issue a global
sync()
call, but instead fsync()
s just
the files written since the last checkpoint. This should improve
performance and minimize degradation during checkpoints.
Add ability to prolong vacuum to reduce performance impact (Jan)
On busy systems, VACUUM
performs many I/O
requests which can hurt performance for other users. This
release allows you to slow down VACUUM
to
reduce its impact on other users, though this increases the
total duration of VACUUM
.
Improve B-tree index performance for duplicate keys (Dmitry Tkach, Tom)
This improves the way indexes are scanned when many duplicate values exist in the index.
Use dynamically-generated table size estimates while planning (Tom)
Formerly the planner estimated table sizes using the values seen
by the last VACUUM
or ANALYZE
,
both as to physical table size (number of pages) and number of rows.
Now, the current physical table size is obtained from the kernel,
and the number of rows is estimated by multiplying the table size
by the row density (rows per page) seen by the last
VACUUM
or ANALYZE
. This should
produce more reliable estimates in cases where the table size has
changed significantly since the last housekeeping command.
Improved index usage with OR
clauses (Tom)
This allows the optimizer to use indexes in statements with many OR
clauses that would not have been indexed in the past. It can also use
multi-column indexes where the first column is specified and the second
column is part of an OR
clause.
Improve matching of partial index clauses (Tom)
The server is now smarter about using partial indexes in queries
involving complex WHERE
clauses.
Improve performance of the GEQO optimizer (Tom)
The GEQO optimizer is used to plan queries involving many tables (by default, twelve or more). This release speeds up the way queries are analyzed to decrease time spent in optimization.
Miscellaneous optimizer improvements
There is not room here to list all the minor improvements made, but numerous special cases work better than in prior releases.
Improve lookup speed for C functions (Tom)
This release uses a hash table to lookup information for dynamically loaded C functions. This improves their speed so they perform nearly as quickly as functions that are built into the server executable.
Add type-specific ANALYZE
statistics
capability (Mark Cave-Ayland)
This feature allows more flexibility in generating statistics for nonstandard data types.
ANALYZE
now collects statistics for
expression indexes (Tom)
Expression indexes (also called functional indexes) allow users to index not just columns but the results of expressions and function calls. With this release, the optimizer can gather and use statistics about the contents of expression indexes. This will greatly improve the quality of planning for queries in which an expression index is relevant.
New two-stage sampling method for ANALYZE
(Manfred Koizar)
This gives better statistics when the density of valid rows is very different in different regions of a table.
Speed up TRUNCATE
(Tom)
This buys back some of the performance loss observed in 7.4, while still
keeping TRUNCATE
transaction-safe.
Add WAL file archiving and point-in-time recovery (Simon Riggs)
Add tablespaces so admins can control disk layout (Gavin)
Add a built-in log rotation program (Andreas Pflug)
It is now possible to log server messages conveniently without relying on either syslog or an external log rotation program.
Add new read-only server configuration parameters to show server
compile-time settings: block_size
,
integer_datetimes
, max_function_args
,
max_identifier_length
, max_index_keys
(Joe)
Make quoting of sameuser
, samegroup
, and
all
remove special meaning of these terms in
pg_hba.conf
(Andrew)
Use clearer IPv6 name ::1/128
for
localhost
in default pg_hba.conf
(Andrew)
Use CIDR format in pg_hba.conf
examples (Andrew)
Rename server configuration parameters SortMem
and
VacuumMem
to work_mem
and
maintenance_work_mem
(Old names still supported) (Tom)
This change was made to clarify that bulk operations such as index and
foreign key creation use maintenance_work_mem
, while
work_mem
is for workspaces used during query execution.
Allow logging of session disconnections using server configuration
log_disconnections
(Andrew)
Add new server configuration parameter log_line_prefix
to
allow control of information emitted in each log line (Andrew)
Available information includes user name, database name, remote IP address, and session start time.
Remove server configuration parameters log_pid
,
log_timestamp
, log_source_port
; functionality
superseded by log_line_prefix
(Andrew)
Replace the virtual_host
and tcpip_socket
parameters with a unified listen_addresses
parameter
(Andrew, Tom)
virtual_host
could only specify a single IP address to
listen on. listen_addresses
allows multiple addresses
to be specified.
Listen on localhost by default, which eliminates the need for the
-i
postmaster switch in many scenarios (Andrew)
Listening on localhost (127.0.0.1
) opens no new
security holes but allows configurations like Windows and JDBC,
which do not support local sockets, to work without special
adjustments.
Remove syslog
server configuration parameter, and add more
logical log_destination
variable to control log output
location (Magnus)
Change server configuration parameter log_statement
to take
values all
, mod
, ddl
, or
none
to select which queries are logged (Bruce)
This allows administrators to log only data definition changes or only data modification statements.
Some logging-related configuration parameters could formerly be adjusted
by ordinary users, but only in the “more verbose” direction.
They are now treated more strictly: only superusers can set them.
However, a superuser can use ALTER USER
to provide per-user
settings of these values for non-superusers. Also, it is now possible
for superusers to set values of superuser-only configuration parameters
via PGOPTIONS
.
Allow configuration files to be placed outside the data directory (mlw)
By default, configuration files are kept in the cluster's top directory. With this addition, configuration files can be placed outside the data directory, easing administration.
Plan prepared queries only when first executed so constants can be used for statistics (Oliver Jowett)
Prepared statements plan queries once and execute them many times. While prepared queries avoid the overhead of re-planning on each use, the quality of the plan suffers from not knowing the exact parameters to be used in the query. In this release, planning of unnamed prepared statements is delayed until the first execution, and the actual parameter values of that execution are used as optimization hints. This allows use of out-of-line parameter passing without incurring a performance penalty.
Allow DECLARE CURSOR
to take parameters
(Oliver Jowett)
It is now useful to issue DECLARE CURSOR
in a
Parse
message with parameters. The parameter values
sent at Bind
time will be substituted into the
execution of the cursor's query.
Fix hash joins and aggregates of inet
and
cidr
data types (Tom)
Release 7.4 handled hashing of mixed inet
and
cidr
values incorrectly. (This bug did not exist
in prior releases because they wouldn't try to hash either
data type.)
Make log_duration
print only when log_statement
prints the query (Ed L.)
Add savepoints (nested transactions) (Alvaro)
Unsupported isolation levels are now accepted and promoted to the nearest supported level (Peter)
The SQL specification states that if a database doesn't support a specific isolation level, it should use the next more restrictive level. This change complies with that recommendation.
Allow BEGIN WORK
to specify transaction
isolation levels like START TRANSACTION
does
(Bruce)
Fix table permission checking for cases in which rules generate a query type different from the originally submitted query (Tom)
Implement dollar quoting to simplify single-quote usage (Andrew, Tom, David Fetter)
In previous releases, because single quotes had to be used to quote a function's body, the use of single quotes inside the function text required use of two single quotes or other error-prone notations. With this release we add the ability to use "dollar quoting" to quote a block of text. The ability to use different quoting delimiters at different nesting levels greatly simplifies the task of quoting correctly, especially in complex functions. Dollar quoting can be used anywhere quoted text is needed.
Make CASE val WHEN compval1 THEN ...
evaluate val
only once (Tom)
CASE
no longer evaluates the tested expression multiple
times. This has benefits when the expression is complex or is
volatile.
Test HAVING
before computing target list of an
aggregate query (Tom)
Fixes improper failure of cases such as SELECT SUM(win)/SUM(lose)
... GROUP BY ... HAVING SUM(lose) > 0
. This should work but formerly
could fail with divide-by-zero.
Replace max_expr_depth
parameter with
max_stack_depth
parameter, measured in kilobytes of stack
size (Tom)
This gives us a fairly bulletproof defense against crashing due to runaway recursive functions. Instead of measuring the depth of expression nesting, we now directly measure the size of the execution stack.
Allow arbitrary row expressions (Tom)
This release allows SQL expressions to contain arbitrary composite types, that is, row values. It also allows functions to more easily take rows as arguments and return row values.
Allow LIKE
/ILIKE
to be used as the operator
in row and subselect comparisons (Fabien Coelho)
Avoid locale-specific case conversion of basic ASCII letters in identifiers and keywords (Tom)
This solves the “Turkish problem” with mangling of words
containing I
and i
. Folding of characters
outside the 7-bit-ASCII set is still locale-aware.
Improve syntax error reporting (Fabien, Tom)
Syntax error reports are more useful than before.
Change EXECUTE
to return a completion tag
matching the executed statement (Kris Jurka)
Previous releases return an EXECUTE
tag for
any EXECUTE
call. In this release, the tag
returned will reflect the command executed.
Avoid emitting NATURAL CROSS JOIN
in rule listings (Tom)
Such a clause makes no logical sense, but in some cases the rule decompiler formerly produced this syntax.
Add COMMENT ON
for casts, conversions, languages,
operator classes, and large objects (Christopher)
Add new server configuration parameter default_with_oids
to
control whether tables are created with OID
s by default (Neil)
This allows administrators to control whether CREATE
TABLE
commands create tables with or without OID
columns by default. (Note: the current factory default setting for
default_with_oids
is TRUE
, but the default
will become FALSE
in future releases.)
Add WITH
/ WITHOUT OIDS
clause to
CREATE TABLE AS
(Neil)
Allow ALTER TABLE DROP COLUMN
to drop an OID
column (ALTER TABLE SET WITHOUT OIDS
still works)
(Tom)
Allow composite types as table columns (Tom)
Allow ALTER ... ADD COLUMN
with defaults and
NOT NULL
constraints; works per SQL spec (Rod)
It is now possible for ADD COLUMN
to create a column
that is not initially filled with NULLs, but with a specified
default value.
Add ALTER COLUMN TYPE
to change column's type (Rod)
It is now possible to alter a column's data type without dropping and re-adding the column.
Allow multiple ALTER
actions in a single ALTER
TABLE
command (Rod)
This is particularly useful for ALTER
commands that
rewrite the table (which include ALTER COLUMN TYPE
and
ADD COLUMN
with a default). By grouping
ALTER
commands together, the table need be rewritten
only once.
Allow ALTER TABLE
to add SERIAL
columns (Tom)
This falls out from the new capability of specifying defaults for new columns.
Allow changing the owners of aggregates, conversions, databases, functions, operators, operator classes, schemas, types, and tablespaces (Christopher, Euler Taveira de Oliveira)
Previously this required modifying the system tables directly.
Allow temporary object creation to be limited to SECURITY
DEFINER
functions (Sean Chittenden)
Add ALTER TABLE ... SET WITHOUT CLUSTER
(Christopher)
Prior to this release, there was no way to clear an auto-cluster specification except to modify the system tables.
Constraint/Index/SERIAL
names are now
table_column_type
with numbers appended to guarantee uniqueness within the schema
(Tom)
The SQL specification states that such names should be unique within a schema.
Add pg_get_serial_sequence()
to return a
SERIAL
column's sequence name (Christopher)
This allows automated scripts to reliably find the SERIAL
sequence name.
Warn when primary/foreign key data type mismatch requires costly lookup
New ALTER INDEX
command to allow moving of indexes
between tablespaces (Gavin)
Make ALTER TABLE OWNER
change dependent sequence
ownership too (Alvaro)
Allow CREATE SCHEMA
to create triggers,
indexes, and sequences (Neil)
Add ALSO
keyword to CREATE RULE
(Fabien
Coelho)
This allows ALSO
to be added to rule creation to contrast it with
INSTEAD
rules.
Add NOWAIT
option to LOCK
(Tatsuo)
This allows the LOCK
command to fail if it
would have to wait for the requested lock.
Allow COPY
to read and write
comma-separated-value (CSV) files (Andrew, Bruce)
Generate error if the COPY
delimiter and NULL
string conflict (Bruce)
GRANT
/REVOKE
behavior
follows the SQL spec more closely
Avoid locking conflict between CREATE INDEX
and CHECKPOINT
(Tom)
In 7.3 and 7.4, a long-running B-tree index build could block concurrent
CHECKPOINT
s from completing, thereby causing WAL bloat because the
WAL log could not be recycled.
Database-wide ANALYZE
does not hold locks
across tables (Tom)
This reduces the potential for deadlocks against other backends
that want exclusive locks on tables. To get the benefit of this
change, do not execute database-wide ANALYZE
inside a transaction block (BEGIN
block); it
must be able to commit and start a new transaction for each
table.
REINDEX
does not exclusively lock the index's
parent table anymore
The index itself is still exclusively locked, but readers of the table can continue if they are not using the particular index being rebuilt.
Erase MD5 user passwords when a user is renamed (Bruce)
PostgreSQL uses the user name as salt when encrypting passwords via MD5. When a user's name is changed, the salt will no longer match the stored MD5 password, so the stored password becomes useless. In this release a notice is generated and the password is cleared. A new password must then be assigned if the user is to be able to log in with a password.
New pg_ctl kill
option for Windows (Andrew)
Windows does not have a kill
command to send signals to
backends so this capability was added to pg_ctl.
Information schema improvements
Add --pwfile
option to
initdb so the initial password can be
set by GUI tools (Magnus)
Detect locale/encoding mismatch in initdb (Peter)
Add register
command to pg_ctl to
register Windows operating system service (Dave Page)
More complete support for composite types (row types) (Tom)
Composite values can be used in many places where only scalar values worked before.
Reject nonrectangular array values as erroneous (Joe)
Formerly, array_in
would silently build a
surprising result.
Overflow in integer arithmetic operations is now detected (Tom)
The arithmetic operators associated with the single-byte
"char"
data type have been removed.
Formerly, the parser would select these operators in many situations
where an “unable to select an operator” error would be more
appropriate, such as null * null
. If you actually want
to do arithmetic on a "char"
column, you can cast it to
integer explicitly.
Syntax checking of array input values considerably tightened up (Joe)
Junk that was previously allowed in odd places with odd results
now causes an ERROR
, for example, non-whitespace
after the closing right brace.
Empty-string array element values must now be written as
""
, rather than writing nothing (Joe)
Formerly, both ways of writing an empty-string element value were allowed, but now a quoted empty string is required. The case where nothing at all appears will probably be considered to be a NULL element value in some future release.
Array element trailing whitespace is now ignored (Joe)
Formerly leading whitespace was ignored, but trailing whitespace between an element value and the delimiter or right brace was significant. Now trailing whitespace is also ignored.
Emit array values with explicit array bounds when lower bound is not one (Joe)
Accept YYYY-monthname-DD
as a date string (Tom)
Make netmask
and hostmask
functions
return maximum-length mask length (Tom)
Change factorial function to return numeric
(Gavin)
Returning numeric
allows the factorial function to
work for a wider range of input values.
to_char
/to_date()
date conversion
improvements (Kurt Roeckx, Fabien Coelho)
Make length()
disregard trailing spaces in
CHAR(n)
(Gavin)
This change was made to improve consistency: trailing spaces are
semantically insignificant in CHAR(n)
data, so they
should not be counted by length()
.
Warn about empty string being passed to
OID
/float4
/float8
data types (Neil)
8.1 will throw an error instead.
Allow leading or trailing whitespace in
int2
/int4
/int8
/float4
/float8
input routines
(Neil)
Better support for IEEE Infinity
and NaN
values in float4
/float8
(Neil)
These should now work on all platforms that support IEEE-compliant floating point arithmetic.
Add week
option to date_trunc()
(Robert Creager)
Fix to_char
for 1 BC
(previously it returned 1 AD
) (Bruce)
Fix date_part(year)
for BC dates (previously it
returned one less than the correct year) (Bruce)
Fix date_part()
to return the proper millennium and
century (Fabien Coelho)
In previous versions, the century and millennium results had a wrong number and started in the wrong year, as compared to standard reckoning of such things.
Add ceiling()
as an alias for ceil()
,
and power()
as an alias for pow()
for
standards compliance (Neil)
Change ln()
, log()
,
power()
, and sqrt()
to emit the correct
SQLSTATE
error codes for certain error conditions, as
specified by SQL:2003 (Neil)
Add width_bucket()
function as defined by SQL:2003 (Neil)
Add generate_series()
functions to simplify working
with numeric sets (Joe)
Fix upper/lower/initcap()
functions to work with
multibyte encodings (Tom)
Add boolean and bitwise integer AND
/OR
aggregates (Fabien Coelho)
New session information functions to return network addresses for client and server (Sean Chittenden)
Add function to determine the area of a closed path (Sean Chittenden)
Add function to send cancel request to other backends (Magnus)
Add interval
plus datetime
operators (Tom)
The reverse ordering, datetime
plus interval
,
was already supported, but both are required by the SQL standard.
Casting an integer to BIT(N)
selects the rightmost N bits
of the integer
(Tom)
In prior releases, the leftmost N bits were selected, but this was deemed unhelpful, not to mention inconsistent with casting from bit to int.
Require CIDR
values to have all nonmasked bits be zero
(Kevin Brintnall)
In READ COMMITTED
serialization mode, volatile functions
now see the results of concurrent transactions committed up to the
beginning of each statement within the function, rather than up to the
beginning of the interactive command that called the function.
Functions declared STABLE
or IMMUTABLE
always
use the snapshot of the calling query, and therefore do not see the
effects of actions taken after the calling query starts, whether in
their own transaction or other transactions. Such a function must be
read-only, too, meaning that it cannot use any SQL commands other than
SELECT
. There is a considerable performance gain from
declaring a function STABLE
or IMMUTABLE
rather than VOLATILE
.
Nondeferred AFTER
triggers are now fired immediately
after completion of the triggering query, rather than upon
finishing the current interactive command. This makes a difference
when the triggering query occurred within a function: the trigger
is invoked before the function proceeds to its next operation. For
example, if a function inserts a new row into a table, any
nondeferred foreign key checks occur before proceeding with the
function.
Allow function parameters to be declared with names (Dennis Björklund)
This allows better documentation of functions. Whether the names actually do anything depends on the specific function language being used.
Allow PL/pgSQL parameter names to be referenced in the function (Dennis Björklund)
This basically creates an automatic alias for each named parameter.
Do minimal syntax checking of PL/pgSQL functions at creation time (Tom)
This allows us to catch simple syntax errors sooner.
More support for composite types (row and record variables) in PL/pgSQL
For example, it now works to pass a rowtype variable to another function as a single variable.
Default values for PL/pgSQL variables can now reference previously declared variables
Improve parsing of PL/pgSQL FOR loops (Tom)
Parsing is now driven by presence of ".."
rather than
data type of FOR
variable. This makes no difference for
correct functions, but should result in more understandable error
messages when a mistake is made.
Major overhaul of PL/Perl server-side language (Command Prompt, Andrew Dunstan)
In PL/Tcl, SPI commands are now run in subtransactions. If an error
occurs, the subtransaction is cleaned up and the error is reported
as an ordinary Tcl error, which can be trapped with catch
.
Formerly, it was not possible to catch such errors.
Accept ELSEIF
in PL/pgSQL (Neil)
Previously PL/pgSQL only allowed ELSIF
, but many people
are accustomed to spelling this keyword ELSEIF
.
Improve psql information display about database objects (Christopher)
Allow psql to display group membership in
\du
and \dg
(Markus Bertheau)
Prevent psql \dn
from showing
temporary schemas (Bruce)
Allow psql to handle tilde user expansion for file names (Zach Irmen)
Allow psql to display fancy prompts, including color, via readline (Reece Hart, Chet Ramey)
Make psql \copy
match COPY
command syntax
fully (Tom)
Show the location of syntax errors (Fabien Coelho, Tom)
Add CLUSTER
information to psql
\d
display
(Bruce)
Change psql \copy stdin/stdout
to read
from command input/output (Bruce)
Add pstdin
/pstdout
to read from
psql's stdin
/stdout
(Mark
Feit)
Add global psql configuration file, psqlrc.sample
(Bruce)
This allows a central file where global psql startup commands can be stored.
Have psql \d+
indicate if the table
has an OID
column (Neil)
On Windows, use binary mode in psql when reading files so control-Z is not seen as end-of-file
Have \dn+
show permissions and description for schemas (Dennis
Björklund)
Improve tab completion support (Stefan Kaltenbrunn, Greg Sabino Mullane)
Allow boolean settings to be set using upper or lower case (Michael Paesold)
Use dependency information to improve the reliability of pg_dump (Tom)
This should solve the longstanding problems with related objects sometimes being dumped in the wrong order.
Have pg_dump output objects in alphabetical order if possible (Tom)
This should make it easier to identify changes between dump files.
Allow pg_restore to ignore some SQL errors (Fabien Coelho)
This makes pg_restore's behavior similar to the results of feeding a pg_dump output script to psql. In most cases, ignoring errors and plowing ahead is the most useful thing to do. Also added was a pg_restore option to give the old behavior of exiting on an error.
pg_restore -l
display now includes
objects' schema names
New begin/end markers in pg_dump text output (Bruce)
Add start/stop times for pg_dump/pg_dumpall in verbose mode (Bruce)
Allow most pg_dump options in pg_dumpall (Christopher)
Have pg_dump use ALTER OWNER
rather
than SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION
by default
(Christopher)
Make libpq's SIGPIPE
handling thread-safe (Bruce)
Add PQmbdsplen()
which returns the display length
of a character (Tatsuo)
Add thread locking to SSL and Kerberos connections (Manfred Spraul)
Allow PQoidValue()
, PQcmdTuples()
, and
PQoidStatus()
to work on EXECUTE
commands (Neil)
Add PQserverVersion()
to provide more convenient
access to the server version number (Greg Sabino Mullane)
Add PQprepare/PQsendPrepared()
functions to support
preparing statements without necessarily specifying the data types
of their parameters (Abhijit Menon-Sen)
Many ECPG improvements, including SET DESCRIPTOR
(Michael)
Allow the database server to run natively on Windows (Claudio, Magnus, Andrew)
Shell script commands converted to C versions for Windows support (Andrew)
Create an extension makefile framework (Fabien Coelho, Peter)
This simplifies the task of building extensions outside the original source tree.
Support relocatable installations (Bruce)
Directory paths for installed files (such as the
/share
directory) are now computed relative to the
actual location of the executables, so that an installation tree
can be moved to another place without reconfiguring and
rebuilding.
Use --with-docdir
to choose installation location of documentation; also
allow --infodir
(Peter)
Add --without-docdir
to prevent installation of documentation (Peter)
Upgrade to DocBook V4.2 SGML (Peter)
New PostgreSQL
CVS tag (Marc)
This was done to make it easier for organizations to manage their own copies of the PostgreSQL CVS repository. File version stamps from the master repository will not get munged by checking into or out of a copied repository.
Clarify locking code (Manfred Koizar)
Buffer manager cleanup (Neil)
Decouple platform tests from CPU spinlock code (Bruce, Tom)
Add inlined test-and-set code on PA-RISC for gcc (ViSolve, Tom)
Improve i386 spinlock code (Manfred Spraul)
Clean up spinlock assembly code to avoid warnings from newer gcc releases (Tom)
Remove JDBC from source tree; now a separate project
Remove the libpgtcl client interface; now a separate project
More accurately estimate memory and file descriptor usage (Tom)
Improvements to the macOS startup scripts (Ray A.)
New fsync()
test program (Bruce)
Major documentation improvements (Neil, Peter)
Remove pg_encoding; not needed anymore
Remove pg_id; not needed anymore
Remove initlocation; not needed anymore
Auto-detect thread flags (no more manual testing) (Bruce)
Use Olson's public domain timezone library (Magnus)
With threading enabled, use thread flags on Unixware for backend executables too (Bruce)
Unixware cannot mix threaded and nonthreaded object files in the same executable, so everything must be compiled as threaded.
psql now uses a flex-generated lexical analyzer to process command strings
Reimplement the linked list data structure used throughout the backend (Neil)
This improves performance by allowing list append and length operations to be more efficient.
Allow dynamically loaded modules to create their own server configuration parameters (Thomas Hallgren)
New Brazilian version of FAQ (Euler Taveira de Oliveira)
Add French FAQ (Guillaume Lelarge)
New pgevent for Windows logging
Make libpq and ECPG build as proper shared libraries on macOS (Tom)
Overhaul of contrib/dblink
(Joe)
contrib/dbmirror
improvements (Steven Singer)
New contrib/xml2
(John Gray, Torchbox)
Updated contrib/mysql
New version of contrib/btree_gist
(Teodor)
New contrib/trgm
, trigram matching for
PostgreSQL (Teodor)
Many contrib/tsearch2
improvements (Teodor)
Add double metaphone to contrib/fuzzystrmatch
(Andrew)
Allow contrib/pg_autovacuum
to run as a Windows service (Dave Page)
Add functions to contrib/dbsize
(Andreas Pflug)
Removed contrib/pg_logger
: obsoleted by integrated logging
subprocess
Removed contrib/rserv
: obsoleted by various separate projects