Re: Escape output of pg_amcheck test
On 08.01.24 16:06, Peter Eisentraut wrote: On 08.01.24 15:04, Aleksander Alekseev wrote: [...] so I quickly wrote some (wrong) instrumentation to try to test your patch. Yep, it confused me too at first. Since the encoding happens right before exit() call, maybe it's worth changing $b in-place in order to make the code slightly more readable for most of us :) My patch originally had the old-style my $b_escaped = $b; $b_escaped =~ s/.../; ... sprintf(..., $b_escaped); but then I learned about the newish /r modifier and thought it was cooler. :) committed
Re: Escape output of pg_amcheck test
On 08.01.24 15:04, Aleksander Alekseev wrote: [...] so I quickly wrote some (wrong) instrumentation to try to test your patch. Yep, it confused me too at first. Since the encoding happens right before exit() call, maybe it's worth changing $b in-place in order to make the code slightly more readable for most of us :) My patch originally had the old-style my $b_escaped = $b; $b_escaped =~ s/.../; ... sprintf(..., $b_escaped); but then I learned about the newish /r modifier and thought it was cooler. :)
Re: Escape output of pg_amcheck test
Hi, > [...] so I quickly wrote some (wrong) instrumentation to try to test your > patch. Yep, it confused me too at first. Since the encoding happens right before exit() call, maybe it's worth changing $b in-place in order to make the code slightly more readable for most of us :) -- Best regards, Aleksander Alekseev
Re: Escape output of pg_amcheck test
> On Jan 8, 2024, at 5:41 AM, Mark Dilger wrote: > > The /r modifier defeats the purpose of the patch, at least for my perl > version, perl 5, version 28, subversion 1 (v5.28.1). With just the /aeg > modifier, it works fine. Nevermind. I might be wrong about that. I didn't have a test case handy that would generate index corruption which would result in characters of the problematic class, and so I quickly wrote some (wrong) instrumentation to try to test your patch. — Mark Dilger EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company
Re: Escape output of pg_amcheck test
On 1/7/24 23:27, Peter Eisentraut wrote: The pg_amcheck reports a skip message if the layout of the index does not match expectations. That message includes the bytes that were expected and the ones that were found. But the found ones are arbitrary bytes, which can have funny effects on the terminal when they are printed. To avoid that, escape non-word characters before printing. + # escape non-word characters to avoid confusing the terminal + $b =~ s{(\W)}{ sprintf '\x%02x', ord($1) }aegr); The /r modifier defeats the purpose of the patch, at least for my perl version, perl 5, version 28, subversion 1 (v5.28.1). With just the /aeg modifier, it works fine. -- Mark Dilger
Re: Escape output of pg_amcheck test
Hi, > The pg_amcheck reports a skip message if the layout of the index does > not match expectations. That message includes the bytes that were > expected and the ones that were found. But the found ones are arbitrary > bytes, which can have funny effects on the terminal when they are > printed. To avoid that, escape non-word characters before printing. LGTM. I didn't get the part about the /r modifier at first, but "man perlre" helped: """ r - perform non-destructive substitution and return the new value """ The /a modifier requires Perl >= 5.14, which is fine [1]. [1]: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/install-requirements.html -- Best regards, Aleksander Alekseev
Escape output of pg_amcheck test
The pg_amcheck reports a skip message if the layout of the index does not match expectations. That message includes the bytes that were expected and the ones that were found. But the found ones are arbitrary bytes, which can have funny effects on the terminal when they are printed. To avoid that, escape non-word characters before printing.From 09d82d19e045114b1e2e7c3751e96cbae1eaaa0c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Peter Eisentraut Date: Mon, 8 Jan 2024 08:23:26 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Escape output of pg_amcheck test The pg_amcheck reports a skip message if the layout of the index does not match expectations. That message includes the bytes that were expected and the ones that were found. But the found ones are arbitrary bytes, which can have funny effects on the terminal when they are printed. To avoid that, escape non-word characters before printing. --- src/bin/pg_amcheck/t/004_verify_heapam.pl | 7 --- 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/bin/pg_amcheck/t/004_verify_heapam.pl b/src/bin/pg_amcheck/t/004_verify_heapam.pl index 8c796ed221..f6d2c5f787 100644 --- a/src/bin/pg_amcheck/t/004_verify_heapam.pl +++ b/src/bin/pg_amcheck/t/004_verify_heapam.pl @@ -367,10 +367,11 @@ sub write_tuple { close($file);# ignore errors on close; we're exiting anyway $node->clean_node; - plan skip_all => - sprintf( + plan skip_all => sprintf( "Page layout of index %d differs from our expectations: expected (%x, %x, \"%s\"), got (%x, %x, \"%s\")", - $tupidx, 0xDEADF9F9, 0xDEADF9F9, "abcdefg", $a_1, $a_2, $b); + $tupidx, 0xDEADF9F9, 0xDEADF9F9, "abcdefg", $a_1, $a_2, + # escape non-word characters to avoid confusing the terminal + $b =~ s{(\W)}{ sprintf '\x%02x', ord($1) }aegr); exit; } -- 2.43.0