On Sat, May 31, 2008 at 08:36:54PM +0100, Gregory Stark wrote:
> > 4) By shifting from a model where postgresql.conf is document-formatted and 
> > hand-edited to one where it's machine generated, it becomes vastly easier 
> > to 
> > write simple utilities to manage these settings.  Right now, the big 
> > "obstacle" to things like SET PERSISTENT is "how to we preseve the 
> > hand-edited comments in the file" -- and the answer is we *don't.*  
> 
> What this sounds like is a sly way to try to get rid of postgresql.conf
> entirely and replace it with parameters stored in the database so admins would
> adjust the parameters using an SQL syntax rather than a text file.
> 
> There are pros and cons of such a system but I think for newbie admins that
> would be a thousand times *more* baffling. You would have to learn new
> commands and have no holistic view of what parameters had been set, what
> related parameters might exist. You also have no way to keep the file in a
> version control system or sync across servers etc.

It doesn't have to be in the database. I kinda like Oracle's method
here; they default to storing config options in a binary file that
(iirc) you can change via commands, but they also provide a way to turn
that binary file into text (and back). That would allow for a lot of
options when it comes to configuring stuff.
-- 
Decibel!, aka Jim C. Nasby, Database Architect  [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Give your computer some brain candy! www.distributed.net Team #1828

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