Hi,

On 2023-02-04 17:12:36 +0100, Greg Stark wrote:
> I think that was spurious. It looked good when we looked at it yesterday.
> The rest that failed seemed unrelated and was also taking on my SSL patch
> too.

I don't think the SSL failures are related to the failure of this
patch. That was in one of the new tests executed as part of the main
regression tests:

https://api.cirrus-ci.com/v1/artifact/task/6418299974582272/testrun/build/testrun/regress/regress/regression.diffs

diff -U3 /tmp/cirrus-ci-build/src/test/regress/expected/temp.out 
/tmp/cirrus-ci-build/build/testrun/regress/regress/results/temp.out
--- /tmp/cirrus-ci-build/src/test/regress/expected/temp.out     2023-02-04 
05:43:14.225905000 +0000
+++ /tmp/cirrus-ci-build/build/testrun/regress/regress/results/temp.out 
2023-02-04 05:46:57.468250000 +0000
@@ -108,7 +108,7 @@
        :old_relfrozenxid <> :new_relfrozenxid  AS frozenxid_advanced;
  pages_analyzed | pages_reset | tuples_analyzed | tuples_reset | 
frozenxid_advanced 
 
----------------+-------------+-----------------+--------------+--------------------
- t              | t           | t               | t            | t
+ t              | t           | t               | t            | f
 (1 row)
 
 -- The toast table can't be analyzed so relpages and reltuples can't


Whereas the SSL test once failed in subscription/031_column_list (a test
with some known stability issues) and twice in postgres_fdw.

Unfortunately the postgres_fdw failures are failing to upload:

[17:41:25.601] Failed to upload artifacts: Put 
"https://storage.googleapis.com/cirrus-ci-5309429912436736-3271c9/artifacts/postgresql-cfbot/postgresql/6061134453669888/testrun/build/testrun/runningcheck.log?X-Goog-Algorithm=GOOG4-RSA-SHA256&X-Goog-Credential=cirrus-ci%40cirrus-ci-community.iam.gserviceaccount.com%2F20230128%2Fauto%2Fstorage%2Fgoog4_request&X-Goog-Date=20230128T174012Z&X-Goog-Expires=600&X-Goog-SignedHeaders=host%3Bx-goog-content-length-range%3Bx-goog-meta-created_by_task&X-Goog-Signature=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":
 http2: request body larger than specified content length

Hm, I suspect the problem is that we didn't shut down the server due to
the error, so the log file was changing while cirrus was trying to
upload.

Greetings,

Andres Freund


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