I wrote: > Grumble ... I seem to have managed to promote intagg from > broken-on-64bit-platforms to broken-on-every-platform ... > will look into a fix tomorrow.
Ron's problem is essentially a double-free bug. In this patch: 2005-01-27 16:35 tgl * contrib/intagg/: int_aggregate.c, int_aggregate.sql.in (REL7_3_STABLE), int_aggregate.c, int_aggregate.sql.in (REL7_4_STABLE), int_aggregate.c, int_aggregate.sql.in (REL8_0_STABLE), int_aggregate.c, int_aggregate.sql.in: Fix security and 64-bit issues in contrib/intagg. This code could stand to be rewritten altogether, but for now just stick a finger in the dike. I modified intagg to declare its transition data type as int4[] (which is what it really is) rather than int4. Unfortunately that means that nodeAgg.c is now aware that the transition value is pass-by-reference, and so it thinks it needs to manage the memory used for it; which intagg.c is also trying to do; so they both free the same bit of memory. There is already a "proper" fix for this problem in CVS tip, but it's too invasive to consider back-patching; not least because nodeAgg's memory management strategy has changed since 7.3 and the fix would probably not work that far back. What I'm thinking I have to do is revert intagg in the back branches to lie about its transition data type, but still have it pull the pointer out of the passed Datum with DatumGetPointer (as opposed to the old, definitely 64-bit-broken method of DatumGetInt32 and then cast to pointer). This should work because nodeAgg doesn't inquire into the actual contents of any Datum it doesn't think is pass-by-reference; so it will never discard the upper bits of the pointer. Ugh. Glad we have a cleaner solution to go forward with. regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 6: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org