Hi Ășt 5. 3. 2024 v 14:55 odesĂlatel Jim Jones <jim.jo...@uni-muenster.de> napsal:
> Hi Laurenz > > On 05.03.24 13:55, Laurenz Albe wrote: > > Inspired by feedback to [1], I thought about how to reduce log spam. > > > > My experience from the field is that a lot of log spam looks like > > > > database/table/... "xy" does not exist > > duplicate key value violates unique constraint "xy" > > > > So what about a parameter "log_suppress_sqlstates" that suppresses > > logging ERROR and FATAL messages with the enumerated SQL states? > > > > My idea for a default setting would be something like > > > > log_suppress_sqlstates = '23505,3D000,3F000,42601,42704,42883,42P01' > > > > but that's of course bikeshedding territory. > > > > Yours, > > Laurenz Albe > > > > > > > > [1]: > https://postgr.es/m/b8b8502915e50f44deb111bc0b43a99e2733e117.camel%40cybertec.at > > I like this idea, and I could see myself using it a lot in some projects. > > Additionally, it would be nice to also have the possibility suppress a > whole class instead of single SQL states, e.g. > > log_suppress_sqlstates = 'class_08' to suppress these all at once: > > 08000 connection_exception > 08003 connection_does_not_exist > 08006 connection_failure > 08001 sqlclient_unable_to_establish_sqlconnection > 08004 sqlserver_rejected_establishment_of_sqlconnection > 08007 transaction_resolution_unknown > 08P01 protocol_violation > > It can take code from PLpgSQL. Regards Pavel > Best regards, > Jim > > > >