Refactor the lock module to split command-specific logic from the basic file locking functionality. Command specific logic is now in command/lock.c. This will make it easier to implement new features such as repository locking and updating lock file contents on remotes.
This implementation is essentially a drop-in replacement but there are a few differences. First, the lock names no longer require a path (the path is added in the lock module). Second, the timeout functionality has been removed since it was not being used.
If a file on the primary was larger than on the replica then the next diff/incr backup would store the primary size instead of the replica size when block incremental was enabled. On the next diff/incr backup this would lead to a repo size must be > 0 for file error when validating the manifest.
Fix this by limiting copy based on sizeOriginal rather than size so size can be set to the value expected to be stored in the manifest. As a bonus sizePrior is no longer needed since size can be used for the same purpose.
This means valgrind is no longer built from source, which caused image builds to run for a very long time.
Valgrind is only required in a few images for testing.
Alternative WAL segment sizes can be configured in PostgreSQL <= 10 with compile-time options. We have not allowed these before since it was not a well-tested feature of PostgreSQL.
However, forks such as Greenplum allow alternative WAL segment sizes at initdb time (which are presumably well-tested) so it makes sense to allow it.
Since the PostgreSQL versions in question are all EOL it is not important to have this restriction in place anymore.
These tests are important for an upcoming bug fix related to differing sizes of a file on a primary vs standby.
The test that demonstrates the bug cannot be included here since it causes a test failure, but this commit introduces the infrastructure and one test to guard against a regression in the bug fix.
lcov does not seem to be very well maintained and is often not compatible with the version of gcc it ships with until a few months after a new distro is released. In any case, lcov is that not useful for us because it generates reports on all coverage while we are mainly interested in missing coverage during development.
Instead use the JSON output generated by gcov to generate our minimal coverage report and metrics for the documentation.
There are some slight differences in the metrics. The difference in the common module was due to a bug in the old code -- build/common was being added into common as well as being reported separately. The source of the two additional branches in the backup module is unknown but almost certainly down to how exclusions are processed with regular expressions. Since there is additional coverage rather than coverage missing this seems fine.
Since this was pretty much a rewrite it was also a good time to migrate to C.
NOTE TO PACKAGERS: The build system for pgBackRest is now meson. The autoconf/make build will not receive any new features and will be removed after a few releases.
Features:
* Add GCS batch delete support. (Reviewed by Reid Thompson.)
* S3 SSE-C encryption support. (Reviewed by Tim Jones. Suggested by Tim Jones.)
* PostgreSQL 17 support. (Reviewed by Stefan Fercot.)
Improvements:
* Allow explicit disabling of optional dependencies in meson builds. (Contributed by Michael Schout. Reviewed by David Steele.)
* Dynamically find python in meson build. (Contributed by Michael Schout. Reviewed by David Steele.)
* Tag pgbackrest build target in meson as installable. (Contributed by Bradford Boyle. Reviewed by David Steele.)
Documentation Improvements:
* Update start/stop documentation to reflect actual functionality. (Reviewed by Stefan Fercot.)
Update the catalog version for beta 1 so pgbackrest will not work with any prior development versions.
Also improve the integration/all test so the catalog version does not need to be updated again during the beta period.
If a host defaults to ipv6 then it can confuse the tests and lead to connection failures and inconsistent error messages.
For now just hard-code the servers to run on ipv4 but this is an area for later improvement.
Coverage of the documentation code is not important enough to report to users. If it were reported it should be in a separate section (along with test code coverage).
3c8819e1 replaced gmtime/localtime with gmtime_r/localtime_r but did not take into account a subtle difference in how they operate. While gmtime/localtime operate as if tzset() has been called, i.e. they operate on the TZ env variable directly, gmtime_r/localtime_r require tzset() to be called after changing TZ for consistent results.
Rather than call tzset() every time TZ is changed, add hrnTzSet() to encapsulate both operations.
This was copied from storagePosixInfo() in a474ba54 but there is no guarantee that errno will be valid at this point. In most cases errno was zero so no system error message was displayed, but when using the Posix driver it could output "[2] No such file or directory". For other drivers errno was generally not set but could output a random error message in that case that errno was set by some unrelated action.
Use THROW_FMT() instead since errno will not always be set correctly and in any case "[2] No such file or directory" is not very useful information since the main error message already says that.
While this is technically a bug it is so harmless that it doesn't merit mention in the release notes.
This was discovered while testing on Fedora 40 which threw "[38] Function not implemented" -- clearly unrelated to missing paths/files.
The GCS driver sent a single file delete request for each file while deleting a path. Depending on latency this could lead to rather long delete times, especially noticeable during expiration.
Improve GCS delete to use batches, which require multipart HTTP, so also add multipart HTTP infrastructure.
This is better than requiring a python3 binary to be on the path because some installations might have, e.g. python3.9.
Also add the python3-distutils package to Debian builds to make this work.
This should have been done in 434938e3 but somehow it didn't happen.
Fedora 38 requires 2048 bit keys so update the VM builds to use them. Update the documentation to use 2048 bit keys. This is not technically required by this commit but it makes sense to do it now.
Also update the key location for the yum.p.o repository.
Lastly, shuffle test PostgreSQL versions since PostgreSQL 11 is not longer available in the yum.p.o repository.
This feature (enabled with --repo-s3-sse-customer-key) provides an encryption key to encrypt the data after it has been transmitted to the server.
While not as secure as encrypting data before transmission (--repo-cipher-type), this may be useful in certain configurations.
These should have been removed when the mock integration tests were removed.
Ideally we would also remove filecopy.table.bin but it serves to provide realistic page data for performance testing.
A valid StringId can never be zero so it more or less serves as a NULL value. In most cases zero will not be valid, but it is better to catch this condition with an assert rather than an error in logging.
NOTE TO PACKAGERS: The build system for pgBackRest is now meson. The autoconf/make build will not receive any new features and will be removed after a few releases.
Bug Fixes:
* Skip zero-length files for block incremental delta restore. (Reviewed by Sebastian Krause, René Højbjerg Larsen. Reported by Sebastian Krause.)
* Fix performance regression in storage list. (Reviewed by Stephen Frost. Reported by Maksym Boguk.)
* Fix progress logging when file size changes during backup. (Reviewed by Stephen Frost. Reported by samkingno.)
Improvements:
* Improved support for dual stack connections. (Reviewed by Stephen Frost. Suggested by Timothée Peignier.)
* Make meson the primary build system. (Reviewed by Stephen Frost.)
* Detect files that have not changed during non-delta incremental backup. (Reviewed by Stephen Frost.)
* Prevent invalid recovery when backup_label removed. (Reviewed by Stephen Frost.)
* Improve archive-push WAL segment queue handling. (Reviewed by Stephen Frost.)
* Limit resume functionality to full backups. (Reviewed by Stephen Frost, Stefan Fercot.)
* Update resume functionality for block incremental. (Reviewed by Stephen Frost.)
* Allow --version and --help for version and help. (Reviewed by Greg Sabino Mullane. Suggested by Greg Sabino Mullane.)
* Add detailed backtrace to autoconf/make build. (Reviewed by Stephen Frost.)
Documentation Improvements:
* Update references to recovery.conf. (Reviewed by Stefan Fercot. Suggested by Stephen Frost.)
If the file size changed during backup then the progress percentage in the log would not be accurate.
Fix this by using the original size to increment the progress since progress total was calculated from original file sizes.
For this to be practically useful secure options must be redacted. Otherwise, no user is likely to share the report.
Since this feature is still internal, there is no real world impact.
Resume was not updated for block incremental so block incremental files were always removed during a resume. Resume worked but was very inefficient with block incremental enabled.
Update resume to preserve block incremental files and add tests.
If backup_label is removed from a restored backup then PostgreSQL will instead use checkpoint information from pg_control to attempt (what is thinks is) crash recovery. This will nearly always result in a corrupt cluster because the checkpoint will not be from the beginning of the backup, and even if it is, the end point will not be specified, which could lead to recovery stopping too early.
To prevent this, invalidate the checkpoint LSN in pg_control on restore. If backup_label is removed then recovery will still fail because PostgreSQL will not be able to find the invalid checkpoint. The LSN of the checkpoint is not logged but it will be visible in pg_controldata output as 0/DEAD. This value is invalid because PostgreSQL always skips the first WAL segment when initializing a cluster.
This serves as an additional sanity check to be sure the pg_control format is as expected. The field is useful for being near the end and containing a limited number of discrete values.
This serves as an additional sanity check to be sure the pg_control format is as expected. The field is useful for being all the way at the end and being four bytes that can only have one of two values. Something more distinctive than 0 and 1 would be better, but this is what we have to work with.
Convert PgControl.pageChecksum to unsigned int and rename to PgControl.pageChecksumVersion and make all downstream changes required for the new datatype.
Connections are established using the "happy eyeballs" approach from RFC 8305, i.e. new addresses (if available) are tried if the prior address has already had a reasonable time to connect. This prevents waiting too long on a failed connection but does not try all the addresses at once. Prior connections that are still waiting are rechecked periodically if no subsequent connection is successful.
This improves substantially on 39bb8a0, which failed to take into account connection attempts that do not fail (but never connect) and use up all the available time.
Meson has a lot of advantages over autoconf/make, primarily in ease-of-use and performance. Make meson the only build system used for testing and building the Debian documentation, but leave the RHEL documentation using autoconf/make for now so it gets some testing.
The leak kind is usually definite but sometimes flaps to possible. For stability purposes accept any leak kind.
Note that this is a leak in a specific version of libssh2 and not a bug in pgBackRest.
Resume does not work correctly with delta diff/incr backups because the presence of a reference causes it to remove the file with the idea that it can just be referenced again. This is true for timestamp-based backups but for deltas all existing files need to be rechecked (which requires a reference).
This is fixable but not without significant effort and new tests and it calls into question the usefulness of non-full resumes. For diff/incr, if the file was changed since the prior backup there is a good chance it will be modified again before the resume occurs.
In order to keep this feature as useful as possible for the most valuable case, limit resumes to full backups.
02eea55 added code to load a buffer of data from a file being backup up to detect files that have been truncated to zero after manifest generation. This mechanism can also be used to detect files that have not changed since the prior backup.
If the result of the file copy fits into a single buffer, then the size and checksum can be compared to the prior file before anything gets stored. If the file matches then it is referenced to the file in to prior backup.
The size that can be compared for normal copies is limited by the buffer size but for block incremental it works with any size file since there is no output from block incremental when the file is identical.
Infer the size of all WAL segments from the size of the first segment rather than getting info for all segments (up to queue size). If the segments are not the same size then there are larger issues than the WAL queue.
storageListP() returns a list of entries in a path and should not need to stat/head, etc. in order to get more detailed info. This was broken by 75623d4 which failed to set the level correctly.
Set the correct level and update tests.
There's no easy way to directly test for a regression here but the SFTP tests will fail if more detailed info is requested since it would require script changes.
The Perl integration tests were migrated as faithfully as possible, but there was some cruft and a few unit tests that it did not make sense to migrate.
Also remove all Perl code made obsolete by this migration.
All unit, performance, and integration tests are now written in C but significant parts of the test harness remain to be migrated.
a42614e introduced the capability to preserve smaller than expected files for block incremental restore delta, but failed to take into account that zero-length files are both useless and cause the block checksum filter to error.
Fix this by skipping zero-length files during block incremental restore delta.
The core Exec object is efficient but geared toward the specific needs of core and not ease-of-use as required for build, documentation, and testing.
execOne() works similarly to system() except that it automatically redirects stderr to stdout and captures the output.
This has never been a problem for performance tests since they do not call functions that log at info level or above, but the upcoming integration tests may do so. In any case it is better to disable this functionality outside of unit tests.
These tests have not been maintained for several years, i.e. no tests for new features have been added. They are highly duplicative of the unit tests but do have the advantage of mixing in different storage drivers. They were allowed to remain because they were not doing any harm even if they were probably not doing any good.
However, the real integration tests (that run directly against PostgreSQL) also test storage drivers and have been updated with new features over time. The real integration tests are now being migrated to C and as part of that effort the mock integration tests need to be removed or migrated, and they do not provide enough value to migrate.
Remove all mock integration tests and a leftover Perl performance test.