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When you find a bug in PostgreSQL we want to hear about
it. Your bug reports play an important part in making PostgreSQL
more reliable because even the utmost care cannot guarantee that every part of PostgreSQL will work on every platform under every circumstance.
The following suggestions are intended to assist you in forming bug reports that can be
handled in an effective fashion. No one is required to follow them but it tends to be to
everyone's advantage.
We cannot promise to fix every bug right away. If the bug is obvious, critical, or affects
a lot of users, chances are good that someone will look into it. It could also happen that we
tell you to update to a newer version to see if the bug happens there. Or we might decide that
the bug cannot be fixed before some major rewrite we might be planning is done. Or perhaps it
is simply too hard and there are more important things on the agenda. If you need help
immediately, consider obtaining a commercial support contract.
Before you report a bug, please read and re-read the documentation to verify that you can
really do whatever it is you are trying. If it is not clear from the documentation whether
you can do something or not, please report that too; it is a bug in the documentation. If it
turns out that the program does something different from what the documentation says, that
is a bug. That might include, but is not limited to, the following circumstances:
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A program terminates with a fatal signal or an operating system error message that
would point to a problem in the program. (A counterexample might be a "disk full" message, since you have to fix that
yourself.)
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A program produces the wrong output for any given input.
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A program refuses to accept valid input (as defined in the documentation).
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A program accepts invalid input without a notice or error message. But keep in mind
that your idea of invalid input might be our idea of an extension or compatibility with
traditional practice.
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PostgreSQL fails to compile, build, or install
according to the instructions on supported platforms.
Here "program" refers to any executable, not only
the backend server.
Being slow or resource-hogging is not necessarily a bug. Read the documentation or ask on
one of the mailing lists for help in tuning your applications. Failing to comply to the SQL standard is not necessarily a bug either, unless compliance for
the specific feature is explicitly claimed.
Before you continue, check on the TODO list and in the FAQ to see if your bug is already
known. If you cannot decode the information on the TODO list, report your problem. The least
we can do is make the TODO list clearer.
The most important thing to remember about bug reporting is to state all the facts and
only facts. Do not speculate what you think went wrong, what "it
seemed to do", or which part of the program has a fault. If you are not familiar
with the implementation you would probably guess wrong and not help us a bit. And even if
you are, educated explanations are a great supplement to but no substitute for facts. If we
are going to fix the bug we still have to see it happen for ourselves first. Reporting the
bare facts is relatively straightforward (you can probably copy and paste them from the
screen) but all too often important details are left out because someone thought it does not
matter or the report would be understood anyway.
The following items should be contained in every bug report:
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The exact sequence of steps from program
start-up necessary to reproduce the problem. This should be self-contained;
it is not enough to send in a bare select statement without the preceding create table
and insert statements, if the output should depend on the data in the tables. We do not
have the time to reverse-engineer your database schema, and if we are supposed to make
up our own data we would probably miss the problem. The best format for a test case for
query-language related problems is a file that can be run through the psql frontend that shows the problem. (Be sure to not have
anything in your ~/.psqlrc start-up file.) An easy start at
this file is to use pg_dump to dump out the table
declarations and data needed to set the scene, then add the problem query. You are
encouraged to minimize the size of your example, but this is not absolutely necessary.
If the bug is reproducible, we will find it either way.
If your application uses some other client interface, such as PHP, then please try to isolate the offending queries. We
will probably not set up a web server to reproduce your problem. In any case remember to
provide the exact input files, do not guess that the problem happens for "large files" or "mid-size
databases", etc. since this information is too inexact to be of use.
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The output you got. Please do not say that it "didn't
work" or "crashed". If there is an
error message, show it, even if you do not understand it. If the program terminates with
an operating system error, say which. If nothing at all happens, say so. Even if the
result of your test case is a program crash or otherwise obvious it might not happen on
our platform. The easiest thing is to copy the output from the terminal, if possible.
Note: In case of fatal errors, the error message reported by the client
might not contain all the information available. Please also look at the log output
of the database server. If you do not keep your server's log output, this would be a
good time to start doing so.
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The output you expected is very important to state. If you just write "This command gives me that output." or "This is not what I expected.", we might run it
ourselves, scan the output, and think it looks OK and is exactly what we expected. We
should not have to spend the time to decode the exact semantics behind your commands.
Especially refrain from merely saying that "This is not what
SQL says/Oracle does." Digging out the correct behavior from SQL is not a fun undertaking, nor do we all know how all the
other relational databases out there behave. (If your problem is a program crash, you
can obviously omit this item.)
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Any command line options and other start-up options, including concerned environment
variables or configuration files that you changed from the default. Again, be exact. If
you are using a prepackaged distribution that starts the database server at boot time,
you should try to find out how that is done.
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Anything you did at all differently from the installation instructions.
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The PostgreSQL version. You can run the command SELECT version(); to find out the version of the server you are
connected to. Most executable programs also support a --version
option; at least postmaster --version and psql
--version should work. If the function or the options do not exist then your
version is more than old enough to warrant an upgrade. You can also look into the README file in the source directory or at the name of your
distribution file or package name. If you run a prepackaged version, such as RPMs, say
so, including any subversion the package may have. If you are talking about a CVS
snapshot, mention that, including its date and time.
If your version is older than 7.3 we will almost certainly tell you to upgrade. There
are tons of bug fixes in each new release, that is why we make new releases.
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Platform information. This includes the kernel name and version, C library,
processor, memory information. In most cases it is sufficient to report the vendor and
version, but do not assume everyone knows what exactly "Debian"
contains or that everyone runs on Pentiums. If you have installation problems then
information about compilers, make, etc. is also necessary.
Do not be afraid if your bug report becomes rather lengthy. That is a fact of life. It is
better to report everything the first time than us having to squeeze the facts out of you.
On the other hand, if your input files are huge, it is fair to ask first whether somebody is
interested in looking into it.
Do not spend all your time to figure out which changes in the input make the problem go
away. This will probably not help solving it. If it turns out that the bug cannot be fixed
right away, you will still have time to find and share your work-around. Also, once again,
do not waste your time guessing why the bug exists. We will find that out soon enough.
When writing a bug report, please choose non-confusing terminology. The software package
in total is called "PostgreSQL", sometimes "Postgres" for short. If you are specifically talking about
the backend server, mention that, do not just say "PostgreSQL
crashes". A crash of a single backend server process is quite different from
crash of the parent "postmaster" process; please don't
say "the postmaster crashed" when you mean a single
backend went down, nor vice versa. Also, client programs such as the interactive frontend "psql" are completely
separate from the backend. Please try to be specific about whether the problem is on the
client or server side.
In general, send bug reports to the bug report mailing list at <pgsql-bugs@postgresql.org>.
You are requested to use a descriptive subject for your email message, perhaps parts of the
error message.
Another method is to fill in the bug report web-form available at the project's web site http://www.postgresql.org/. Entering a
bug report this way causes it to be mailed to the <pgsql-bugs@postgresql.org>
mailing list.
Do not send bug reports to any of the user mailing lists, such as <pgsql-sql@postgresql.org>
or <pgsql-general@postgresql.org>. These mailing lists are for
answering user questions and their subscribers normally do not wish to receive bug reports.
More importantly, they are unlikely to fix them.
Also, please do not send reports to
the developers' mailing list <pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org>.
This list is for discussing the development of PostgreSQL
and it would be nice if we could keep the bug reports separate. We might choose to take up a
discussion about your bug report on pgsql-hackers, if the problem
needs more review.
If you have a problem with the documentation, the best place to report it is the
documentation mailing list <pgsql-docs@postgresql.org>. Please
be specific about what part of the documentation you are unhappy with.
If your bug is a portability problem on a non-supported platform, send mail to <pgsql-ports@postgresql.org>, so we (and you) can work on porting PostgreSQL to your platform.
Note: Due to the unfortunate amount of spam going around, all of the above
email addresses are closed mailing lists. That is, you need to be subscribed to a list
to be allowed to post on it. (You need not be subscribed to use the bug report web-form,
however.) If you would like to send mail but do not want to receive list traffic, you
can subscribe and set your subscription option to nomail. For
more information send mail to <majordomo@postgresql.org>
with the single word help in the body of the message.
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