Vendorized code is copied from another project when a library is not available and a git subproject won't work. Currently all the vendorized code is copied from PostgreSQL but it makes sense to have a more general mechanism for indicating vendorized code.
The .vendor extension will be used to denote vendorized code in the same way that .auto is used to denote auto-generated code.
Previously memNew() used memset() to initialize all struct members to 0, NULL, false, etc. While this appears to work in practice, it is a violation of the C specification. For instance, NULL == 0 must be true but neither NULL nor 0 must be represented with all zero bits.
Instead use designated initializers to initialize structs. These guarantee that struct members will be properly initialized even if they are not specified in the initializer. Note that due to a quirk in the C99 specification at least one member must be explicitly initialized even if it needs to be the default value.
Since pre-zeroed memory is no longer required, adjust memAllocInternal()/memReallocInternal() to return raw memory and update dependent functions accordingly. All instances of memset() have been removed except in debug/test code where needed.
Add memMewPtrArray() to allocate an array of pointers and automatically set all pointers to NULL.
Rename memGrowRaw() to the more logical memResize().
The control and catalog versions were stored a variety of places in the optimistic hope that they would be useful. In fact they never were.
We can't remove them from the backup.info and backup.manifest files due to backwards compatibility concerns, but we can at least avoid loading and storing them in C structures.
Add functions to the PostgreSQL interface which will return the control and catalog versions for any supported version of PostgreSQL to allow backwards compatibility for backup.info and backup.manifest. These functions will be useful in other ways, e.g. generating the tablespace identifier in PostgreSQL >= 9.0.
This was missed because the unit tests were reusing a buffer without resetting it to zero, so this flag ended up still set when the test function was called.
This was not a live issue since it only expressed in tests and this code is not used in master yet.
Having a copy per version worked well until it was time to add new features or modify existing functions. Then it was necessary to modify every version and try to keep them all in sync.
Consolidate all the PostgreSQL types into a single file using #if for type versions. Many types do not change or change infrequently so this cuts down on duplication. In addition, it is far easier to see what has changed when a new version is added.
Use macros to write the interface functions. There is still duplication here since some changes require a new copy of the macro, but it is far less than before.