Dear Mark, Agreed except for paths (see below). But now that we agree, why not move to Windows in three steps: 1) Release a minimal Cygwin + PostgreSQL installer, 2) Have 100.000 downloads or more Windows developpers, 3) Work as a team on a Windows port.
By the way : Cygwin accepts both Windows AND Unix paths depending on installation options. Cygwin is able to understand C:\program files\postgresql\var\lib\pgsql, /cygdrive/../var/lib/pgsql or simply /var/lib/pgsql. Cheers, Jean-Michel > Here are the problems with cygwin: > (1) GNU license issues. > (2) Does not work well with anti-virus software > (3) Since OS level copy-on-write is negated, process creation is much > slower. (4) Since OS level copy-on-write is negated, memory that otherwise > would not be allocated to the process is forced to be allocated when the > parent process data is copied. > As a product manager, I would not commit to using a cygwin application in > production. Do you know of any long-uptime systems using cygwin? PostgreSQL > would need to run for months. I would view it as a risk. > Lastly, a Windows program is expected to be a Windows program. Native paths > need to be used, like C:\My Database, D:\My Postgres, or something like > that. Native tools must be used to manage it. ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 2: you can get off all lists at once with the unregister command (send "unregister YourEmailAddressHere" to [EMAIL PROTECTED])