On 11.07.2007 23:07, Anton Melser wrote:
Just a word of advice... unless you plan to spend lots of time on your
db (like you want to think about it more than twice a week sort of
thing...), just go with what you have in terms of the distro. We are
running 8.1.4. And it just works, yes, even after all this time! You
are certainly behind a good firewall, so if you have X.X.X, and it
works (ie, your developpers have certified for X.X.X), why think about
having the latest? Upgrading to new versions may well expose problems
(like I remember someone talking about query optimisations a while
back) that are non issues. If you are going to be pushing the limits,
then compiling your own versions is not going to be an issue...
Just my 2c
Cheers
Anton
ps. I know, when a new version comes out so often it is soooooooooo
hard to resist!

Well, a good reason for upgrades are fixed bugs, and as minor releases focus on that, there is a good reason to stay half way up-to-date within the branch you are using.

This god like faith of some admins in package maintainers, that they know what's right, good and stable for them, sometimes really worries me.

Besides that.. I'd really expect my distribution to offer me the choice of what version of PostgreSQL to install.


--
Regards,
Hannes Dorbath

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