On Fri, Sep 23, 2011 at 10:15 AM, Philip Rhoades <[email protected]> wrote: > Chris, > > > On 2011-09-24 03:09, Chris Travers wrote: >> On Fri, Sep 23, 2011 at 10:06 AM, Philip Rhoades <[email protected]> >> wrote: >>> Chris, >>> >> >>> It is not really critical for me - I just thought it would be nice >>> to >>> have all packages that are required to be installed in one go (I >>> would >>> normally have PG installed already anyway). >>> >> The major reason to consider a separate package would be that 1.3 >> relies on the contrib modules which are packaged separately. So >> having something which requires both the server and the contrib >> modules to be installed might be nice (with .debs, one can list the >> dependencies as optional, but that's not an option with rpms). > > > OK, sounds good. > > >> So I am thinking of just creating a separate rpm with the additional >> dependencies. this isn't such an issue beyond 1.3, because it isn't >> clear we need the contrib modules if we are willing to require Pg 8.4 >> or higher. > > > Pg 9.x is not in the lsmb roadmap and it will probably be the standard > soon . . how many using lsmb have talked about DB replication etc? > 9.x is supported. 1.3.x is tested mostly currently on 8.3-9.0. I don't know of any reason why 9.1 would cause issues.
But supporting and requiring are different. 1.3 doesn't use any new features added since 8.1, so that's the minimum version it can theoretically run on. 8.1 is only supported through a few vendors anymore and so given that security fixes are not available through postgresql.org anymore, I don't officially support it. A lot of development/testing occurred on 8.2. I don't advertise support on 8.2 because it is nearing end of life, and 8.3 makes it easier to add full text indexing in a forward-compatible way. Unofficially, I believe it runs. Going forward though, and requiring 8.4 for 1.4 would allow us to use WITH RECURSIVE instead of connectby(), and thus we can get rid of both the tsearch2 and tablefunc dependencies. Best Wishes, Chris Travers Best Wishes, Chris Travers ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ All of the data generated in your IT infrastructure is seriously valuable. Why? It contains a definitive record of application performance, security threats, fraudulent activity, and more. Splunk takes this data and makes sense of it. IT sense. And common sense. http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-d2dcopy2 _______________________________________________ Ledger-smb-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ledger-smb-users
