The September 2012 commitfest has been running now for six weeks, and we've been making some progress. That stalled a bit last week due to the European conference; hopefully there are now some renewed energies to let us finish it up soon.
One thing I do *not* want to do is send many patches to the next commitfest. That will only make the final commitfests worse by piling up stuff no one seems to care about (except their submitter). So if you're able to help, please do. There are now 65 patches listed; 20 of them have been committed so far, and 22 have been returned with feedback. 1 was sent to the next commitfest ("lock_timeout"). Waiting on Author: 1 Needs Review: 10 Ready for Committer: 7 One patch is "Waiting on Author" ("Incorrect behaviour when using a GiST index on points"). This is a bug fix and so requires special dedication, and backpatch. One of the GiST hackers should really get to it soon, please. Ten patches are in "Needs Review" state. - From Amit Kapila: * Performance Improvement in Buffer Management for Select operation Jeff Janes has been looking at this. I think we should close it for now. More performance figures are needed. * Patch to compute Max LSN of Data Pages Apparently it's difficult to get people excited about this. There was no discussion. - From Alexander Korotkov: * Decrease GiST bloat when penalties are identical * Range Types statistics * Adjacent in SP-GiST for range-types I think these three patches are pretty close to ready, according to the review comments. If somebody can give them a final look to commit this week, that'd be great. May need a final revision to be sent. * 2d-mapping based GiST for ranges This one doesn't seem to have gotten any review. I would like to send this one to the next commitfest. - Other guys: * FOR KEY SHARE foreign keys (me) This one is seeing some more discussion lately. I'm not closing it just yet mainly to avoid killing the discussion. * [PoC] Writable Foreign Tables (KaiGai Kohei) This needs to be examined by someone with executor insight. * Skip checkpoint on promoting from streaming replication (Kyotaro Horiguchi) Simon is going to handle this at some point; I will punt to next CF. Additionally, seven patches are "Ready for Committer": * Updatable views Tom said he was going to handle this one * tuplesort memory usage: grow_memtuples Greg Stark signed up for this * Trim trailing NULL columns Josh Berkus was going to do performance testing, but if he published anything I can't find it. Robert said, in the previous commitfest, that if the benchmarks were right then "this patch is ready to go in". It's been long since any committer weighed in on this thread, though. * Make pg_basebackup configure and start standby Magnus signed up for this * Fix console prompt encoding on Windows Noah thinks this is pretty much ready to commit. No one signed up, but a Windows committer needed. Magnus, Andrew? * parallel pg_dump Andrew Dunstan said he was going to handle this. * plpgsql_check_function Selena submitted an re-indented copy of the last one submitted by Pavel but apparently something was wrong about what she did; got advice about it but didn't get around to submitting another version. There was another thread around message 4f7c7346.2090...@enterprisedb.com and it doesn't look like Selena followed that one. I'm not sure where this patch stands, really; the history needs to be checked carefully to ensure what Pavel last submitted is in line with the review in the previous discussions. There are 163 emails in three threads, each starting at CAFj8pRDkkzSi611Eimp=axj2hd46k-w46gdvw9mkad2ogwo...@mail.gmail.com 1330807185-sup-2...@alvh.no-ip.org cafj8prayvtqycl8_nf_hdqjc0m+jbvbwr6e_zj0sjfkkq9m...@mail.gmail.com I vaguely recall Greg Stark signed up for another patch recently, but I can't readily find which one it was. -- Álvaro Herrera http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/ PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers