Thanks JD.

>From what I read about WAL (you have been referring to this:
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/wal-internals.html pg_xlog,
right?) it allows us to know what happened, but does it warranty known
secure state? I mean, I do not think it would help with this:

"In general, security mechanisms should be designed so that a failure will
follow the same execution path as disallowing the operation. For example,
application security methods, such as isAuthorized(), isAuthenticated(),
and validate(), should all return false if there is an exception during
processing. If security controls can throw exceptions, they must be very
clear about exactly what that condition means. "

Right?

Thanks,

Oleg



On Tue, Jan 5, 2016 at 5:14 PM, Joshua D. Drake <j...@commandprompt.com>
wrote:

> On 01/05/2016 03:09 PM, oleg yusim wrote:
>
>
>>
>> The question here, what is PostreSQL 9.4.5 (hosted on Linux box)
>> behavior? Does it fail to known/secure state in these 3 cases? I tried
>> to find the description of the way PostgreSQL fails in this regard, but
>> didn't find much.
>>
>>
> Based on what you pasted, PostgreSQL does fail to a known state. That is
> the whole point of the xlog.
>
> Sincerely,
>
> JD
>
>
> Thanks,
>>
>> Oleg
>>
>
>
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