Alvaro Herrera <alvhe...@commandprompt.com> writes:
> I disagree with this change.  Debug builds are very useful to have in
> production, and you don't want to be running -O0 there.  I have found
> that you can use a src/Makefile.custom like this for those times when you
> want to debug stuff in a particular set of files:

> CFLAGS := $(patsubst -O2,-O0,$(CFLAGS))

> Then you remove the .o files that you want to debug, and rerun make.

FWIW, I only use Makefile.custom for more-or-less-permanent changes to
the build behavior of a particular machine.  For one-shot things like
recompiling some particular file(s) at -O0, it's easier to do this:

        rm foo.o
        make PROFILE=-O0
        reinstall postgres executable

The makefiles automatically add PROFILE at the end of CFLAGS, so you can
inject any compile flag this way --- I think the original intent was to
use it to add -pg for gprof-enabled builds.  But it's handy for this.

BTW, if you're hacking Postgres code and don't already have a
"reinstall" script, you need one.  Mine is basically

        pg_ctl stop
        cd $PGBLDROOT/src/backend
        make install-bin
        pg_ctl start

                        regards, tom lane

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