Reject cases where a query in WITH rewrites to just NOTIFY.
Since the executor can't cope with a utility statement appearing
as a node of a plan tree, we can't support cases where a rewrite
rule inserts a NOTIFY into an INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE command appearing
in a WITH clause of a larger query. (O
Reject cases where a query in WITH rewrites to just NOTIFY.
Since the executor can't cope with a utility statement appearing
as a node of a plan tree, we can't support cases where a rewrite
rule inserts a NOTIFY into an INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE command appearing
in a WITH clause of a larger query. (O
Reject cases where a query in WITH rewrites to just NOTIFY.
Since the executor can't cope with a utility statement appearing
as a node of a plan tree, we can't support cases where a rewrite
rule inserts a NOTIFY into an INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE command appearing
in a WITH clause of a larger query. (O
Reject cases where a query in WITH rewrites to just NOTIFY.
Since the executor can't cope with a utility statement appearing
as a node of a plan tree, we can't support cases where a rewrite
rule inserts a NOTIFY into an INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE command appearing
in a WITH clause of a larger query. (O
Reject cases where a query in WITH rewrites to just NOTIFY.
Since the executor can't cope with a utility statement appearing
as a node of a plan tree, we can't support cases where a rewrite
rule inserts a NOTIFY into an INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE command appearing
in a WITH clause of a larger query. (O
Reject cases where a query in WITH rewrites to just NOTIFY.
Since the executor can't cope with a utility statement appearing
as a node of a plan tree, we can't support cases where a rewrite
rule inserts a NOTIFY into an INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE command appearing
in a WITH clause of a larger query. (O
Reject cases where a query in WITH rewrites to just NOTIFY.
Since the executor can't cope with a utility statement appearing
as a node of a plan tree, we can't support cases where a rewrite
rule inserts a NOTIFY into an INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE command appearing
in a WITH clause of a larger query. (O
Update configure's probe for libldap to work with OpenLDAP 2.5.
The separate libldap_r is gone and libldap itself is now always
thread-safe. Unfortunately there seems no easy way to tell by
inspection whether libldap is thread-safe, so we have to take
it on faith that libldap is thread-safe if th
Update configure's probe for libldap to work with OpenLDAP 2.5.
The separate libldap_r is gone and libldap itself is now always
thread-safe. Unfortunately there seems no easy way to tell by
inspection whether libldap is thread-safe, so we have to take
it on faith that libldap is thread-safe if th
Update configure's probe for libldap to work with OpenLDAP 2.5.
The separate libldap_r is gone and libldap itself is now always
thread-safe. Unfortunately there seems no easy way to tell by
inspection whether libldap is thread-safe, so we have to take
it on faith that libldap is thread-safe if th
Update configure's probe for libldap to work with OpenLDAP 2.5.
The separate libldap_r is gone and libldap itself is now always
thread-safe. Unfortunately there seems no easy way to tell by
inspection whether libldap is thread-safe, so we have to take
it on faith that libldap is thread-safe if th
Update configure's probe for libldap to work with OpenLDAP 2.5.
The separate libldap_r is gone and libldap itself is now always
thread-safe. Unfortunately there seems no easy way to tell by
inspection whether libldap is thread-safe, so we have to take
it on faith that libldap is thread-safe if th
Update configure's probe for libldap to work with OpenLDAP 2.5.
The separate libldap_r is gone and libldap itself is now always
thread-safe. Unfortunately there seems no easy way to tell by
inspection whether libldap is thread-safe, so we have to take
it on faith that libldap is thread-safe if th
Update configure's probe for libldap to work with OpenLDAP 2.5.
The separate libldap_r is gone and libldap itself is now always
thread-safe. Unfortunately there seems no easy way to tell by
inspection whether libldap is thread-safe, so we have to take
it on faith that libldap is thread-safe if th
Avoid creating a RESULT RTE that's marked LATERAL.
Commit 7266d0997 added code to pull up simple constant function
results, converting the RTE_FUNCTION RTE to a dummy RTE_RESULT
RTE since it no longer need be scanned. But I forgot to clear
the LATERAL flag if the RTE has it set. If the function
Avoid creating a RESULT RTE that's marked LATERAL.
Commit 7266d0997 added code to pull up simple constant function
results, converting the RTE_FUNCTION RTE to a dummy RTE_RESULT
RTE since it no longer need be scanned. But I forgot to clear
the LATERAL flag if the RTE has it set. If the function
Avoid creating a RESULT RTE that's marked LATERAL.
Commit 7266d0997 added code to pull up simple constant function
results, converting the RTE_FUNCTION RTE to a dummy RTE_RESULT
RTE since it no longer need be scanned. But I forgot to clear
the LATERAL flag if the RTE has it set. If the function
Un-break AIX build.
In commit d0a02bdb8, I'd supposed that uniformly probing for
ldap_bind would make the intent clearer. However, that seems
not to work on AIX, for obscure reasons (maybe it's a macro
there?). Revert to the former behavior of probing
ldap_simple_bind for thread-safe cases and l
Un-break AIX build.
In commit d0a02bdb8, I'd supposed that uniformly probing for
ldap_bind would make the intent clearer. However, that seems
not to work on AIX, for obscure reasons (maybe it's a macro
there?). Revert to the former behavior of probing
ldap_simple_bind for thread-safe cases and l
Un-break AIX build.
In commit d0a02bdb8, I'd supposed that uniformly probing for
ldap_bind would make the intent clearer. However, that seems
not to work on AIX, for obscure reasons (maybe it's a macro
there?). Revert to the former behavior of probing
ldap_simple_bind for thread-safe cases and l
Un-break AIX build.
In commit d0a02bdb8, I'd supposed that uniformly probing for
ldap_bind would make the intent clearer. However, that seems
not to work on AIX, for obscure reasons (maybe it's a macro
there?). Revert to the former behavior of probing
ldap_simple_bind for thread-safe cases and l
Un-break AIX build.
In commit d0a02bdb8, I'd supposed that uniformly probing for
ldap_bind would make the intent clearer. However, that seems
not to work on AIX, for obscure reasons (maybe it's a macro
there?). Revert to the former behavior of probing
ldap_simple_bind for thread-safe cases and l
Un-break AIX build.
In commit d0a02bdb8, I'd supposed that uniformly probing for
ldap_bind would make the intent clearer. However, that seems
not to work on AIX, for obscure reasons (maybe it's a macro
there?). Revert to the former behavior of probing
ldap_simple_bind for thread-safe cases and l
Un-break AIX build.
In commit d0a02bdb8, I'd supposed that uniformly probing for
ldap_bind would make the intent clearer. However, that seems
not to work on AIX, for obscure reasons (maybe it's a macro
there?). Revert to the former behavior of probing
ldap_simple_bind for thread-safe cases and l
Eliminate replication protocol error related to IDENTIFY_SYSTEM.
The requirement that IDENTIFY_SYSTEM be run before START_REPLICATION
was both undocumented and unnecessary. Remove the error and ensure
that ThisTimeLineID is initialized in START_REPLICATION.
Elect not to backport because this requ
libpq: Fix sending queries in pipeline aborted state
When sending queries in pipeline mode, we were careless about leaving
the connection in the right state so that PQgetResult would behave
correctly; trying to read further results after sending a query after
having read a result with an error wou
libpq: Fix sending queries in pipeline aborted state
When sending queries in pipeline mode, we were careless about leaving
the connection in the right state so that PQgetResult would behave
correctly; trying to read further results after sending a query after
having read a result with an error wou
Un-break AIX build, take 2.
I incorrectly diagnosed the reason why hoverfly is unhappy.
Looking closer, it appears that it fails to link libldap
unless libssl is also present; so the problem was my
idea of clearing LIBS before making the check. Revert
to essentially the original coding, except th
Un-break AIX build, take 2.
I incorrectly diagnosed the reason why hoverfly is unhappy.
Looking closer, it appears that it fails to link libldap
unless libssl is also present; so the problem was my
idea of clearing LIBS before making the check. Revert
to essentially the original coding, except th
Un-break AIX build, take 2.
I incorrectly diagnosed the reason why hoverfly is unhappy.
Looking closer, it appears that it fails to link libldap
unless libssl is also present; so the problem was my
idea of clearing LIBS before making the check. Revert
to essentially the original coding, except th
Un-break AIX build, take 2.
I incorrectly diagnosed the reason why hoverfly is unhappy.
Looking closer, it appears that it fails to link libldap
unless libssl is also present; so the problem was my
idea of clearing LIBS before making the check. Revert
to essentially the original coding, except th
Un-break AIX build, take 2.
I incorrectly diagnosed the reason why hoverfly is unhappy.
Looking closer, it appears that it fails to link libldap
unless libssl is also present; so the problem was my
idea of clearing LIBS before making the check. Revert
to essentially the original coding, except th
Un-break AIX build, take 2.
I incorrectly diagnosed the reason why hoverfly is unhappy.
Looking closer, it appears that it fails to link libldap
unless libssl is also present; so the problem was my
idea of clearing LIBS before making the check. Revert
to essentially the original coding, except th
Un-break AIX build, take 2.
I incorrectly diagnosed the reason why hoverfly is unhappy.
Looking closer, it appears that it fails to link libldap
unless libssl is also present; so the problem was my
idea of clearing LIBS before making the check. Revert
to essentially the original coding, except th
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