Updates for all maintained versions of PostgreSQL are available today:
8.3.3, 8.2.9, 8.1.13, 8.0.17 and 7.4.21. These releases fix more than
two dozen minor issues reported and patched over the last few months.
All PostgreSQL users should plan to update at their earliest
convenience. People in affected time zones, in particular, should
upgrade as soon as possible.
Release Notes:
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.3/static/release.html
Also, fix umask error in periodic script [1].
PR: ports/124457 [1]
Submitted by: Alexandre Perrin
long-awaited version 8.3 of the most advanced open source database,
which cements our place as the best performing open source
database. Among the performance features you'll be excited about in
8.3 are:
* Heap Only Tuples
* BGWriter Autotuning
* Asynchronous Commit
* Spread Checkpoints
* Synchronous Scan
* "Var-Varlena"
* L2 Cache Protection
* Lazy XID
8.3 also has a lot of cool features for PostgreSQL DBAs and developers, including:
* CSV Logging
* SQL/XML
* MS Visual C++ support
* ENUMs
* Integrated Tsearch
* SSPI & GSSAPI
* Composite Type Arrays
* pg_standby
[1] Fix problem installing from package.
[2] Use DISTVERSION instead of PORTVERSION.
(the port reports now correct version 8.3.r2)
[2] Enable more 8.3 features:
- Add OPTION for the new XML data type (default: enabled)
- Add OPTION for usage of system timezone data (default: included tzdata)
PR: ports/119770 [1], ports/119561 [2]
Submitted by: Artis Caune [1], Martin Matuska [2]
This includes a bunch of security fixes: CVE-2007-6067, CVE-2007-4772,
CVE-2007-6601, CVE-2007-6600 and CVE-2007-4769.
Security: http://www.postgresql.org/about/news.905
The recent security release (8.0.11, 8.1.7, 8.2.2) has been withdrawn.
It contained an issue which causes error with custom data types, type
constraints and expression indexes. These upgrades fix the problem.
A vulnerability allows suppressing the normal checks that a SQL
function returns the data type it's declared to do. These errors can
easily be exploited to cause a backend crash, and in principle might
be used to read database content that the user should not be able to
access. [CVE-2007-0555]
A vulnerability involving changing the data type of a table column
can easily be exploited to cause a backend crash, and in principle
might be used to read database content that the user should not be
able to access. [CVE-2007-0556]
The release includes a set of other fixes as well. Please see the
release information at
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.2/static/release-8-2-2.html
Security: http://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2007-0555
Security: http://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2007-0556
The PostgreSQL Global Development Group today released versions 8.1.4, 8.0.8,
7.4.13 and 7.3.15. This is an urgent update to close a security hole which
can permit a SQL injection attack on some applications running PostgreSQL.
Users are urged to apply the update as soon as reasonably possible. Since the
update affects client functionality, most driver projects will be updating
this week as well.
Because the security issue involved is complex, we have added a section in
Techdocs to explain it: http://www.postgresql.org/docs/techdocs.52. Please
read this first before applying the updates.
Also, fix rc_subr startup problems on FreeBSD-7.x.
Security: http://www.postgresql.org/docs/techdocs.50
PR: ports/95154
A critical fix repairs an error in ReadBuffer that can cause data loss
due to overwriting recently-added pages. This applies to the 8.1 and
8.0 branches on all platforms.
Note that this update might require a reindex of textual columns under
certain conditions; please see UPDATING.
Other fixes included are:
-- Character string locale comparison bug. This may require a REINDEX
on text column indexes in some locales, such as Hungarian.
-- Prevent accidental changes of locale by plperl
-- Two fixes for Japanese encodings
-- Two fixes for COPY CSV
-- Fixes for functions returning RECORD
-- Fixes to autovacuum, dblink and pgcrypto
The new release includes performance improvements and advanced SQL
features which will support bigger data warehouses, higher-volume
transaction processing, and more complex distributed enterprise
software.
Major new features in this release include:
Roles:
PostgreSQL now supports database roles, which simplify the
management of large numbers of users with complex
overlapping database rights.
IN/OUT Parameters:
PostgreSQL functions now support IN, OUT and INOUT
parameters, which substantially improves support of complex
business logic for J2EE and .NET applications.
Two-Phase Commit (2PC):
Long in demand for WAN applications and heterogeneous data
centers using PostgreSQL, this feature allows
ACID-compliant transactions across widely separated
servers.
Some Performance Enhancements found in this release include:
Improved Multiprocessor (SMP) Performance:
The buffer manager for 8.1 has been enhanced to scale almost
linearly with the number of processors, leading to significant
performance gains on 8-way, 16-way, dual-core, and multi-core
CPU servers.
Bitmap Scan:
Indexes will be dynamically converted to bitmaps in memory when
appropriate, giving up to twenty times faster index performance
on complex queries against very large tables.
Table Partitioning:
The query planner is now able to avoid scanning whole sections
of a large table using a technique known as Constraint
Exclusion.
Shared Row Locking:
PostgreSQL's "better than row-level locking" now supports even
higher levels of concurrency through the addition of shared
row locks for foreign keys.
For a more complete listing of changes in this release, please see the
Release Notes visible at:
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/release.html#RELEASE-8-1
installed, the patched gram.y file would not be used and the security
patch would be a no-op. Also, I've had reports of compilation errors
related to bison.
Since checking for the correct version of bison is hard and error
prone, I'm doing what the postgresql distribution does - patching the
yacc:ed .c file to get rid of the building dependency.
Bumping portrevision of -server.
Pointy hat to: me
Noticed by: Mike Harding and others
Security: http://www.vuxml.org/freebsd/6b4b0b3f-8127-11d9-a9e7-0001020eed82.html
Approved by: seanc (implicit)
Over the past several weeks, Tom Lane has been working on replacing
our old Cache Management Alorithm (ARC) with a new, patent free one
(2Q).
In order to reduce the number of 8.x deployments out there that are
using the old manager, we have just released 8.0.2, and encourage
adminstrators to upgrade at their earliest convience.
For those already running 8.x on your production servers, please
note that this upgrade does *NOT* require a dump restore, but due to
a bump in the major version number for the client library (libpq),
it *WILL* require all client applications to be recompiled at the
same time.
For full release info, see
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.0/static/release.html#RELEASE-8-0-2
Apart from the upgrade, three new config options are added:
A patch (experimental) for supporting proper collation
of utf-8 encoded locales, using IBM's ICU package (devel/icu). See
http://people.freebsd.org/~girgen/postgresql-icu/README.html for more
info.
An optional patch written by Evgen Potemkin, which allows
PostgreSQL to make hierarchical queries à la Oracle [1].
An option is added that allows the use of 64 bit ints to
store dates [2].
PR: ports/79165 [1], ports/76999 [2]
Submitted by: Marcos Tischer Vallim [1], Christian Ullrich [2]
Approved by: ade, seanc (implicit)
the "LOAD" option, the PostgreSQL Global Development Group is
announcing the release of new versions of PostgreSQL.
Update to 7.3.9, 7.4.7 & 8.0.1.
Take the opportunity to reset PORTREVISION of slave ports.
Back out name change of startup script. The new script uses rc.subr(8),
and as such also uses rcorder(8). But, rcorder does not exist in FreeBSD
4.x. Hence rename the script it back to the top of the directory
list. [1]
The periodic script should of course be executable. [2]
[1] Noted by Niels Chr. Bank-Pedersen <ncbp at bank-pedersen dot dk>
[2] Noted by Fritz Heinrichmeyer <fritz.heinrichmeyer at fernuni-hagen dot de>
are savepoints (within transactions), point-in-time recovery and
tablespaces. Check out the release notes and the shiny new
PostgreSQL.org website at:
http://www.PostgreSQL.org/docs/8.0/static/release.html#RELEASE-8-0
The port uses the new postgresql ports' layout and is split into a
server and a client part. The following knobs can be used by ports
depending on PostgreSQL:
# USE_PGSQL - Add PostgreSQL client dependency.
# If no version is given (by the maintainer via the port or
# by the user via defined variable), try to find the
# currently installed version. Fall back to default if
# necessary (PostgreSQL-7.4 = 74).
# DEFAULT_PGSQL_VER
# - PostgreSQL default version. Can be overridden within a port.
# Default: 74.
# WANT_PGSQL_VER
# - Maintainer can set an arbitrary version of PostgreSQL by
# using it.
# BROKEN_WITH_PGSQL
# - This variable can be defined if the ports doesn't support
# one or more versions of PostgreSQL.
PR: 75344
Approved by: portmgr@ (kris), ade & sean (mentors)
advisories in http://www.postgresql.org/news/234.html
Note that postgresql 7.2.x is NOT being updated here since it is
due for termination real soon now.
Submitted by: maintainer, also referenced in ports/73142 (no patch)
* Prevent possible loss of committed transactions during crash
* Repair possible crash during concurrent btree index insertions
PR: 71176
Submitted by: SUGIMURA Takashi <sugimura@jp.FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed by: Palle Girgensohn <girgen@pingpong.net> (maintainer)
Release notes available at http://www.postgresql.org/news/173.html
NOTICE: unlike most minor versions, this version does require
some updates to the pg_* system tables. Full instructions for
how to do this are included in the full HISTORY file.
DO NOT UPGRADE WITHOUT READING THESE INSTRUCTIONS.
SIZEfy.
Submitted by: Palle Girgensohn <girgen@pingpong.net> (maintainer)
PR: 64105
regarded as a major release with features with interest to those with
large databases. The updates are extensive and the best source of info
is in the release notes. Enjoy and direct questions to database@!
Release notes:
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/7.4/static/release.html#RELEASE-7-4
PR: ports/59403, ports/59404, ports/59393, ports/59394,
ports/59395, ports/59397, ports/59398, ports/59402, &&
ports/59401
Submitted by: maintainer
Approved by: marcus (portmgr@ hat)
"In order to address a potentially serious (although rare)
server startup failure that was recently reported, we have
released PostgreSQL version 7.3.4. This release is critical
for users of PostgreSQL version 7.3.3, and highly recommended
for all other PostgreSQL users."
Submitted by: Palle Girgensohn <girgen@pingpong.net> (maintainer)
PR: 55354
1. Optionally link with libc_r to get plpython working. [1]
2. Fix kerberos build. [2]
3. There was a duplication of some declarations. [3]
PR: ports/52851
PR: ports/51080 [2]
Submitted by: Mike Meyer <mwm@mired.org> [1]
Submitted by: Gerweck <andy@tacnode.com> [2]
Pointed out by: Mike Harding <mvh@ix.netcom.com> [3]
Submitted by: Palle Girgensohn <girgen@pingpong.net> (maintainer)
Fixes numerous bugs especially with various interface libraries and
pg_dump. All users are advised to upgrade. This update fixes all known
problems with the postgresql7 port. See release notes for details:
http://developer.postgresql.org/docs/postgres/release-7-3-2.html
A dump/restore is *not* required when upgrading to this version.
PR: ports/47983 [1], ports/47284 [2], ports/47808 [3]
Submitted by: maintainer [1]
Jason C. Wells [2]
Michel Oosterhof <m.oosterhof@xs4all.nl> [3]
A note about how to install languages into a PostgreSQL database is added.
PR: ports/29916
Submitted by: Palle Girgensohn <girgen@partitur.se> (MAINTAINER)
Michal Pasternak <doc@lublin.t1.pl> (the note)