> Thomas, would you remind me of the concusions because I thought everyone > involved felt that it should be an initdb-only option, but I still see > it in CVS.
?? "Concussions" as in brain bruises? ;) I'm not sure I understand the question. I assume that we are talking about the WAL log location feature I implemented recently. It is an initdb-only option, and defaults to the current behavior *exactly*. The new feature is to allow an argument to initdb to locate the WAL file to another location. That location can be specified on the command line, or through an environment variable. Neither form precludes use of the other, and either form can be considered "best practice" depending on your opinion of what that is. The postmaster also recognizes the command line option and environment variable. The only suggestion I got as an alternative involved soft links, which is not portable, which is not robust, and which is not used anywhere else in the system. If we moved toward relying on soft links for distributing resources we will be moving in the wrong direction for many reasons, some of which I've mentioned previously. GUC parameters were also mentioned as a possibility, and the infrastructure does not preclude that at any time. I don't recall that there were very many folks "involved". There were several opinions, though most were from folks who were not thinking of implementing disk management features. Some opinions dealt with details, and some seemed to deal with the wisdom of allowing anything other than a "one partition" model of the database, which is nothing if not short sighted. Current default behavior is as first implemented, and the new feature allows locating the WAL logs in another area. For the current state of the art, that seems competitive with features found in other database products, and an essential step in teaching PostgreSQL to work with very large databases. I had thought to extend the capabilities to allow resource allocation for individual tables and indices, which has *long* been identified as a desired capability by folks who are managing large systems. It seemed reasonable to have done in time for 7.3. I'm rethinking that, not because it shouldn't happen, but because the process of discussing these issues has become so argumentative, divisive, impolite, and unpleasant. Which is a shame imho... - Thomas ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 3: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate subscribe-nomail command to [EMAIL PROTECTED] so that your message can get through to the mailing list cleanly