Allows casting const-ness away from an expression, but doesn't allow changing the type. Enforcement of the latter currently only works for gcc-like compilers.
Note that it is not safe to cast const-ness away if the result will ever be modified (it would be undefined behavior). Doing so can cause compiler mis-optimizations or runtime crashes (by modifying read-only memory). It is only safe to use when the result will not be modified, but API design or language restrictions prevent you from declaring that (e.g. because a function returns both const and non-const variables).
Note that this only works in function scope, not for global variables (it would be nice, but not trivial, to improve that).
UNCONSTIFY() requires static assert which is a feature in its own right.
PostgreSQL enables this option when available which seems like a good idea since we also do not share connections between processes.
Note that as in PostgreSQL there is no way to disable this option.
PostgreSQL enables this option when available which seems like a good idea since we also buffer transmissions.
Note that as in PostgreSQL there is no way to disable this option.
This is really a socket option so the new name is clearer.
Since common/io/socket/tcp will contains a mix of options it makes sense to rename it to socket and cascade name changes as needed.
Prior to 2.25 the individual TCP keep-alive options were not being configured due to a missing header. In 2.25 they were being configured incorrectly due to a disconnect between the timeout specified in ms and what was expected by the TCP options, i.e. seconds.
Instead make the TCP keep-alive options directly configurable, with correct units and better testing. Keep-alive is enabled by default (though it can be defaulted to the system setting instead) and the rest of the options are not set by default. This is in line with what PostgreSQL does, though PostgreSQL does not allow keep-alive to be defaulted.
Also move configuration of TCP options before connect() as PostgreSQL does.
This functionality was embedded into TlsClient but that was starting to get unwieldy.
Add SocketClient to contain all socket-related client functionality.
Documentation builds and tests have only a few packages in common so rearrange packages to save some time and clarify dependencies.
Remove the libperl-dev package which became obsolete when the LibC module was removed in 79cfd3ae.
Add a few comments for good measure.
The primary purpose of this test (currently) is to measure the performance of storageRemoteInfoList(), which is critical for building a manifest when the PostgreSQL host is remote.
The starting baseline of 1 million files is perhaps a bit aggressive but it seems very likely to blow up if there are performance regressions.
Recent performance improvements allow increasing the baseline of this test.
In general it is best if the baseline is large enough to cause the test to blow up if there are performance regressions.
Features:
* Add lz4 compression support. Note that setting compress-type=lz4 will make new backups and archive incompatible (unrestorable) with prior versions of pgBackRest. (Reviewed by Cynthia Shang.)
* Add --dry-run option to the expire command. Use dry-run to see which backups/archive would be removed by the expire command without actually removing anything. (Contributed by Cynthia Shang, Luca Ferrari.)
Improvements:
* Improve performance of remote manifest build. (Suggested by Jens Wilke.)
* Fix detection of keepalive options on Linux. (Contributed by Marc Cousin.)
* Add configure host detection to set standards flags correctly. (Contributed by Marc Cousin.)
* Remove compress/compress-level options from commands where unused. These commands (e.g. restore, archive-get) never used the compress options but allowed them to be passed on the command line. Now they will error when these options are passed on the command line. If these errors occur then remove the unused options. (Reviewed by Cynthia Shang.)
* Limit backup file copy size to size reported at backup start. If a file grows during the backup it will be reconstructed by WAL replay during recovery so there is no need to copy the additional data. (Reviewed by Cynthia Shang.)
If the tests are running quickly then the time target might end up the same as the end time of the prior full backup. That means restore auto-select will not pick it as a candidate and restore the last backup instead causing the restore compare to fail.
So, sleep one second.
Add functions to select a current backup by label and to retrieve a backup dependency list for any given backup.
Update the expire code to utilize the new functions and to expire backup sets from newest dependency to oldest.
Decisions about when to optimize or enable debug code were spread out in too many places making it hard to keep them consistent.
Centralize the logic as much as possible to make it easier to maintain.
Append N characters from a zero-terminated string.
Note that the string does not actually need to be zero-terminated as long as N is <= the end of the string being concatenated.
In the ExpireEnvTest.pm backupCreate() function, backup-prior was incorrectly set for diff backups to the previous backup regardless of what backup type the previous backup was. This did not cause any issues in the Mock Expire tests before because it was not being checked. However, in order to reduce churn in the expect logs for a new feature where the backup-prior is utilized, this is being fixed so that the full backup is always used as backup-prior.
The major bottleneck was finding the memory allocation to be resized since it required a sequential search through a list.
Instead, put the allocation header at the beginning of the allocation and return an offset to the user for their buffer. This allows us to use pointer arithmetic to get back to the allocation header quickly when resizing. A side effect is to make memFree() faster as well. The downside is we won't detect garbage pointers passed to memResize()/memFree(), which is also true for MemContext pointers.
The performance benefits can be pretty large in certain cases, in particular when loading and saving manifests. The following are the before and after performance tests on a 900K file manifest.
Before:
run 003 - manifestNewLoad()/manifestSave()
000.000s l0125 - generate manifest
183.411s l0236 - 101.2MB manifest generated with 900000 files
183.411s l0239 - load manifest
403.816s l0243 - completed in 220405ms
403.816s l0245 - check file total
403.816s l0248 - save manifest
670.217s l0253 - completed in 266401ms
670.217s l0256 - find all files
671.263s l0266 - completed in 1046ms
After:
run 003 - manifestNewLoad()/manifestSave()
000.000s l0125 - generate manifest
007.730s l0236 - 101.2MB manifest generated with 900000 files
007.730s l0239 - load manifest
033.431s l0243 - completed in 25701ms
033.431s l0245 - check file total
033.431s l0248 - save manifest
057.755s l0253 - completed in 24324ms
057.755s l0256 - find all files
058.689s l0266 - completed in 934ms
* Fix a few issues with file names being truncated introduced in 787d3fd6.
* Use function line info from the lcov file to calculate which lines to show for uncovered functions. This is more accurate than what we were doing before and function comment headers are now excluded which reduces clutter in the report.
The prior macros had grown over time to be pretty significant pieces of code that required a lot of compile time, though runtime was efficient.
Move most of the macro code into functions to reduce compile time, perhaps at a slight expense to runtime. The overall performance benefit is 10-15% so this seems like a good tradeoff.
Add TEST_RESULT_UINT_INT() to safely compare uint to int with range checking.
Upcoming changes to the TEST_RESULT_* macros are more type safe and identified that the wrong macros were being used to test results in many cases.
Commit these changes separately to verify that they work with the current macro versions.
Note that no core bugs were exposed by these changes.
TRY...CATCH blocks are fairly expensive and when all the TEST_RESULT*() macros succeed they are not needed.
Instead just record info at the start of the result test so a detailed exception can be thrown in test.c in the rare case where an exception occurs.
This is helpful for test macros that know the line number.
The line number can now be non-zero below the top of the stack without WITH_BACKTRACE so instead ignore the line number for output when it is zero.
This was passing since we don't test WITH_BACKTRACE in CI because it is used only for test builds.
Ideally we would test this but it doesn't seem worth the trouble at the moment.
Building the contributing document has some special requirements because it runs Docker in Docker so the repo path must align on the host and all Docker containers. Run `pgbackrest/doc/doc.pl` from within the home directory of the user that will do the doc build, e.g. `home/vagrant`. If the repo is not located directly in the home directory, e.g. `/home/vagrant/pgbackrest`, then a symlink may be used, e.g. `ln -s /path/to/repo /home/vagrant/pgbackrest`.
Mount the repo in the Vagrantfile at /home/vagrant/pgbackrest but provide a link from the old location at /backrest to make the transition less painful.
The old coverage data has been recorded so it is no longer needed. In newer versions of gcc leaving this file around can lead to an error when writing profile data after forking off to a non-pgbackrest binary (which we do in some unit tests).
* Show all uncovered branch parts even when there are more than two parts per branch. This is the way gcc9 reports coverage so it needs to work even if it doesn't make as much sense as the old way.
* Show covered branches in functions where coverage is missing. Showing just the uncovered branches can be confusing because it's not always clear how the coverage relates to the code. By showing all branch coverage (+ or -) this correspondence is made easier.
We don't report branch coverage on test modules (e.g. test/src/module/common/errorTest.c) but the code that excluded branch coverage from the test module would also exclude it from all core modules if the test module was included in the lcov report due to lack of function/line coverage.
Adjust the coverage code to only exclude branches during the extraction of test module coverage.
For some reason gcc9 would not do -O0 builds in combination with one of the options that libperl required. Now that libperl is gone this exception is no longer required.
If a file grows during the backup it will be reconstructed by WAL replay during recovery so there is no need to copy the additional data.
This also reduces the likelihood of seeing torn pages during the copy. Torn pages can still occur in the middle of the file, though, so they must be handled.