Bug Fixes:
* Improve slow manifest build for very large quantities of tables/segments. (Reported by Jens Wilke.)
* Fix exclusions for special files. (Reported by CluelessTechnologist, Janis Puris, Rachid Broum.)
Improvements:
* The stanza-create/update/delete commands are implemented entirely in C. (Contributed by Cynthia Shang.)
* The start/stop commands are implemented entirely in C. (Contributed by Cynthia Shang.)
* Create log directories/files with 0750/0640 mode. (Suggested by Damiano Albani.)
Documentation Bug Fixes:
* Fix yum.p.o package being installed when custom package specified. (Reported by Joe Ayers, John Harvey.)
Documentation Improvements:
* Build pgBackRest as an unprivileged user. (Suggested by Laurenz Albe.)
The {[os-type-is-centos]} expression was missing parens which meant "and" expressions built on it would always evaluate true if the os-type was centos6.
Reported by Joe Ayers, John Harvey.
Decoding a manifest from the JSON provided by C to the hash required by Perl is an expensive process. If manifest() was called on a remote it was being decoded into a hash and then immediately re-encoded into JSON for transmission over the protocol layer.
Instead, provide a function for the remote to get the raw JSON which can be transmitted as is and decoded in the calling process instead.
This makes remote manifest calls as fast as they were before 2.16, but local calls must still pay the decoding penalty and are therefore slower. This will continue to be true until the Perl storage interface is retired at the end of the C migration.
Note that for reasonable numbers of tables there is no detectable difference. The case in question involved 250K tables with a 10 minute decode time (which was being doubled) on a fast workstation.
These constants should be kept separate because the implementation of any info file might change in the future and only the interface should be expected to remain consistent.
In any case, infoBackup requires Variant constants while infoManifest uses String constants so they are not shareable. Modern compilers should combine the underlying const char * constants.
This test is commonly used for sanity checking but the combination of S3 and encryption makes it hard to use and encourages temporary changes to make it usable.
Acknowledge this and disable S3 and encryption for this test and move them to mock/all/2.
ioReadLine() errors on eof because it has previously been used only for protocol reads.
Returning on eof is handy for reading lines from files where eof is not considered an error.
Prior to 2.16 the Perl manifest code would skip any file that began with a dot. This was not intentional but it allowed PostgreSQL socket files to be located in the data directory. The new C code in 2.16 did not have this unintentional exclusion so socket files in the data directory caused errors.
Worse, the file type error was being thrown before the exclusion check so there was really no way around the issue except to move the socket files out of the data directory.
Special file types (e.g. socket, pipe) will now be automatically skipped and a warning logged to notify the user of the exclusion. The warning can be suppressed with an explicit --exclude.
Reported by CluelessTechnologist, Janis Puris, Rachid Broum.
This strFree() was the primary culprit in the performance issue fixed in 9eaeb33c.
Since the parent mem context is now freed regularly, this strFree() performs better, but still adds time so removing it seems best.
In versions <= 2.15 the old regexp caused any file or directory beginning with . to be ignored during a backup. This has caused behavioral differences in 2.16 because the new C code correctly excludes ./.. directories.
This Perl code is only used for testing now, but it should still match the output of the C functions.
Putting the checksum at the beginning of the file made it impossible to stream the file out when saving. The entire file had to be held in memory while it was checksummed so the checksum could be written at the beginning.
Instead place the checksum at the end. This does not break the existing Perl or C code since the read is not order dependent.
There are no plans to improve the Perl code to take advantage of this change, but it will make the C implementation more efficient.
Reviewed by Cynthia Shang.
Checking the PostgreSQL-reported path and version against the pgBackRest configuration helps ensure that pgBackRest is operating against the correct cluster.
In Perl this functionality was in the Db object, but check seems like a better place for it in C.
Contributed by Cynthia Shang.
Previously the host id to use was pulled from the host-id option or defaulted to 1.
The stanza, check, and backup commands will all need the ability to address a specified pg host, so add functions to make that possible.
Previously, info files (e.g. archive.info, backup.info) were created in Perl and only loaded in C.
The upcoming stanza commands in C need to create these files so refactor the Info* objects to allow new, empty objects to be created. Also, add functions needed to initialize each Info* object to a valid state.
Contributed by Cynthia Shang.
Previously storageLocal() was being used internally but loading pg_control from remote storage is often required.
Also, storagePg() is more appropriate than storageLocal() for all current usage.
Contributed by Cynthia Shang.
pgBackRest was being built by root in the documentation which is definitely not best practice.
Instead build as the unprivileged default container user. Sudo privileges are still required to install.
Suggested by Laurenz Albe.
The pg1-socket-path and pg1-port options were not being reset when options from a higher index were being pushed down for processing by a remote. Since remotes only talk to one cluster they always use the options in index 1. This requires moving options from the original index to 1 before starting the remote. All options already set on index 1 must be removed if they are not being overwritten.
storagePosixInfoList() processed each directory in a single memory context. If the directory contained hundreds of thousands of files processing became very slow due to the number of allocations.
Instead, reset the memory context every thousand files to minimize the number of allocations active at once, improving both speed and memory consumption.
Reported by Jens Wilke.
Processing large datasets in a memory context can lead to high memory usage and long allocation times. Add a new MEM_CONTEXT_TEMP_RESET_BEGIN() macro that allows temp allocations to be automatically freed after N iterations.
Calculate the most common value in a list of variants. If there is a tie then the first value passed to mcvUpdate() wins.
mcvResult() can be called multiple times because it does not end processing, but there is a cost to calculating the result each time
since it is not stored.
"null" is not allowed in the manifest format (null values should be missing instead) but Perl was treating the invalid values written by this test as if they were missing.
Update the test code to remove the values rather than setting them to "null".
Logging stayed in the backup log until the Perl code started. Fix this so it logs to the correct file and will still work after the Perl code is removed.
The log directories/files were being created with a mix of modes depending on whether they were created in C or Perl. In particular, the C code was creating log files with the execute bit set for the user and group which was just odd.
Standardize on 750/640 for both code paths.
Suggested by Damiano Albani.
The Perl versions remain because they are still being used by the Perl stanza commands. Once the stanza commands are migrated they can be removed.
Contributed by Cynthia Shang.