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On Tue, Nov 09, 2010 at 12:14:06PM -0800, Charles Pritchard wrote:
[...]
as it reflects the current state of security.
Which is... well, I haven't a word for *that*.
Regards
- -- tomás
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Thanks for your answer!
I'm not really familiar with inheritance, but I wonder how this issue
is handled in other cases, for instance renaming an index, which invokes
internal a constraint rename too. Is that relevant or is the renaming of
constraints so special?
Is there a solution for the
Hmm, the second for loop in gseg_picksplit uses i maxoff whereas the
other one uses =. The first is probably correct; if the second is also
correct it merits a comment on the discrepancy (To be honest, I'd get
rid of the -1 in computing maxoff and use in both places, given that
offsets are
Peter Eisentraut wrote:
On tis, 2010-11-09 at 14:00 -0800, David E. Wheeler wrote:
I've been talking to Nasby and Dunstan about adding a
Test::More/pgTAP-based test suite to the core. It wouldn't run
with the usual core suite used by developers, which would continue
to use pg_regress.
(2010/11/10 13:06), Robert Haas wrote:
In this patch, we put InvokeObjectAccessHook0 on the following functions.
- heap_create_with_catalog() for relations/attributes
- ATExecAddColumn() for attributes
- NamespaceCreate() for schemas
- ProcedureCreate() for aggregates/functions
- TypeCreate()
Hmm, the second for loop in gseg_picksplit uses i maxoff whereas the
other one uses =. The first is probably correct; if the second is also
correct it merits a comment on the discrepancy (To be honest, I'd get
rid of the -1 in computing maxoff and use in both places, given that
offsets
Hi,
a question came to us in the form of a code example,
which I shortened. Say, we have this structure:
EXEC SQL BEGIN DECLARE SECTION;
struct t1 {
int id;
chart[80];
};
typedef struct t1 t1_t;
t1_tt1;
EXEC SQL END DECLARE SECTION;
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 4:53 PM, Alexander Korotkov aekorot...@gmail.comwrote:
Hmm, the second for loop in gseg_picksplit uses i maxoff whereas the
other one uses =. The first is probably correct; if the second is also
correct it merits a comment on the discrepancy (To be honest, I'd get
On 2010-11-10 14:27, Alvaro Herrera wrote:
Hmm, the second for loop in gseg_picksplit uses i maxoff whereas the
other one uses=. The first is probably correct; if the second is also
correct it merits a comment on the discrepancy (To be honest, I'd get
rid of the -1 in computing maxoff and use
On Thu, Dec 17, 2009 at 8:05 AM, Peter Eisentraut pet...@postgresql.org wrote:
Log Message:
---
Don't unblock SIGQUIT in the SIGQUIT handler
This was possibly linked to a deadlock-like situation in glibc syslog code
invoked by the ereport call in quickdie(). In any case, a signal
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 5:37 PM, Yeb Havinga yebhavi...@gmail.com wrote:
They are necessary and it is code untouched by this patch, and the same
line occurs in other picksplit functions as well. The gbt_num_picksplit
function shows that it can be avoided, by rewriting in the second loop
On 2010-11-10 15:46, Alexander Korotkov wrote:
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 5:37 PM, Yeb Havinga yebhavi...@gmail.com
mailto:yebhavi...@gmail.com wrote:
They are necessary and it is code untouched by this patch, and the
same line occurs in other picksplit functions as well. The
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 6:05 PM, Yeb Havinga yebhavi...@gmail.com wrote:
On 2010-11-10 15:46, Alexander Korotkov wrote:
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 5:37 PM, Yeb Havinga yebhavi...@gmail.com wrote:
They are necessary and it is code untouched by this patch, and the same
line occurs in other
Alexander Korotkov aekorot...@gmail.com writes:
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 4:53 PM, Alexander Korotkov
aekorot...@gmail.comwrote:
Actually I can't understand the purpose of FirstOffsetNumber
and OffsetNumberNext macros.
For example, if we assume, that OffsetNumberNext can do something other
On 2010-11-10 14:53, Alexander Korotkov wrote:
Actually I can't understand the purpose of FirstOffsetNumber
and OffsetNumberNext macros. When I wrote the patch I though about
sortItems as about clean from all these strange things array, that's
why I didn't use OffsetNumberNext there. :)
I
On tis, 2010-11-09 at 03:54 -0800, Dave Page wrote:
Narwhal should be OK now.
The build has issues now, possibly related to the make upgrade.
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On Nov 10, 2010, at 5:31 AM, Kevin Grittner wrote:
For the Serializable Snapshot Isolation (SSI) patch I needed a test
suite which would handle concurrent sessions which interleaved
statements in predictable ways. I was told pgTAP wasn't a good
choice for that and went with Markus Wanner's
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 08:33:13AM -0800, David Wheeler wrote:
On Nov 10, 2010, at 5:31 AM, Kevin Grittner wrote:
For the Serializable Snapshot Isolation (SSI) patch I needed a
test suite which would handle concurrent sessions which
interleaved statements in predictable ways. I was told
On 11/10/2010 08:31 AM, Kevin Grittner wrote:
I don't know if dtester meets the other needs people have, or whether
this is a complementary approach, but it seemed worth mentioning.
Where is this available? Is it self-contained? And what does it require?
cheers
andrew
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On Nov 10, 2010, at 9:48 AM, Andrew Dunstan wrote:
I don't know if dtester meets the other needs people have, or whether
this is a complementary approach, but it seemed worth mentioning.
Where is this available? Is it self-contained? And what does it require?
Python.
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 8:33 AM, KaiGai Kohei kai...@kaigai.gr.jp wrote:
(2010/11/10 13:06), Robert Haas wrote:
In this patch, we put InvokeObjectAccessHook0 on the following functions.
- heap_create_with_catalog() for relations/attributes
- ATExecAddColumn() for attributes
-
On 11/10/2010 10:32 AM, Peter Eisentraut wrote:
On tis, 2010-11-09 at 03:54 -0800, Dave Page wrote:
Narwhal should be OK now.
The build has issues now, possibly related to the make upgrade.
Yeah, it's complaining about not finding bison, but configure managed to
find bison just fine.
David E. Wheeler da...@kineticode.com wrote:
On Nov 10, 2010, at 9:48 AM, Andrew Dunstan wrote:
Where is this available? Is it self-contained? And what does it
require?
Python.
And some optional python packages, like twisted.
http://www.bluegap.ch/projects/dtester/
It looks like I
On 08.11.2010 15:40, Heikki Linnakangas wrote:
Here's a first draft of this, using the inCommit flag as is. It works,
but suffers from starvation if you have a lot of concurrent
multi-WAL-record actions. I tested that by running INSERTs to a table
with tsvector field with a GiST index on it from
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 15:31, Kevin Grittner
kevin.gritt...@wicourts.gov wrote:
For the Serializable Snapshot Isolation (SSI) patch I needed a test
suite which would handle concurrent sessions which interleaved
statements in predictable ways. I was told pgTAP wasn't a good
choice for that
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 6:32 AM, Viktor Valy vili0...@gmail.com wrote:
Thanks for your answer!
I'm not really familiar with inheritance, but I wonder how this issue
is handled in other cases, for instance renaming an index, which invokes
internal a constraint rename too. Is that relevant or is
Hi,
On 11/10/2010 07:28 PM, Kevin Grittner wrote:
It looks like I may have raised the issue at a particularly
inopportune time -- it looks like maybe Markus is reloading his git
repo based on the new official git repo for PostgreSQL.
Thanks for noticing me. The dtester repository should be
On ons, 2010-11-10 at 07:31 -0600, Kevin Grittner wrote:
I don't know if dtester meets the other needs people have, or whether
this is a complementary approach, but it seemed worth mentioning.
The right tool for the right job, I'd say.
One thing to aim for, perhaps, would be to make all tools
Marti Raudsepp ma...@juffo.org wrote:
Sounds like you could use pgTAP with dblink to do the same? :)
I had never read through the docs for dblink until you posted this.
In fact, it appears that some testing of proper SSI behavior can be
added to standard regression tests with dblink (without
On 11/10/2010 05:06 PM, Kevin Grittner wrote:
Marti Raudseppma...@juffo.org wrote:
Sounds like you could use pgTAP with dblink to do the same? :)
I had never read through the docs for dblink until you posted this.
In fact, it appears that some testing of proper SSI behavior can be
added
Heikki Linnakangas heikki.linnakan...@enterprisedb.com writes:
The new rule is that before you start a multi-WAL-record operation that
needs to be completed at end of recovery if you crash in the middle, you
call HoldCheckpoint(), and once you're finished, ResumeCheckpoint().
What happens
On Nov 10, 2010, at 2:15 PM, Andrew Dunstan wrote:
We already use some contrib stuff in the regression tests. (It really is time
we stopped calling it contrib.)
Call them core extensions. Works well considering Dimitri's work, which
explicitly makes them extensions. So maybe change the
(2010/11/11 3:00), Robert Haas wrote:
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 8:33 AM, KaiGai Koheikai...@kaigai.gr.jp wrote:
(2010/11/10 13:06), Robert Haas wrote:
In this patch, we put InvokeObjectAccessHook0 on the following functions.
- heap_create_with_catalog() for relations/attributes
-
I wrote:
What happens if you error out in between? Or is it assumed that the
*entire* sequence is a critical section? If it has to be that way,
one might wonder what's the point of trying to split it into multiple
WAL records.
Or, to be more concrete: I'm wondering if this *entire*
David E. Wheeler da...@kineticode.com writes:
On Nov 10, 2010, at 2:15 PM, Andrew Dunstan wrote:
We already use some contrib stuff in the regression tests. (It really is
time we stopped calling it contrib.)
Call them core extensions. Works well considering Dimitri's work, which
explicitly
On Nov 10, 2010, at 3:17 PM, Tom Lane wrote:
We've been calling it contrib for a dozen years, so that name is
pretty well baked in by now. IMO renaming it is pointless and will
accomplish little beyond creating confusion and making back-patches
harder.
*Shrug*. Just change the name in the
On 11/10/2010 06:17 PM, Tom Lane wrote:
David E. Wheelerda...@kineticode.com writes:
On Nov 10, 2010, at 2:15 PM, Andrew Dunstan wrote:
We already use some contrib stuff in the regression tests. (It really is time
we stopped calling it contrib.)
Call them core extensions. Works well
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 6:39 PM, David E. Wheeler da...@kineticode.com wrote:
On Nov 10, 2010, at 3:17 PM, Tom Lane wrote:
We've been calling it contrib for a dozen years, so that name is
pretty well baked in by now. IMO renaming it is pointless and will
accomplish little beyond creating
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 8:05 PM, Andrew Dunstan and...@dunslane.net wrote:
On 11/10/2010 07:51 PM, Robert Haas wrote:
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 7:01 PM, Andrew Dunstanand...@dunslane.net
wrote:
The current name causes constant confusion. It's a significant misnomer,
and
leads people to
Yeah that is what seems to be the best way. The thing is that I am looking
in the PostgreSQL code for the first time and I am not fully aware of the
data structures or the methods / algos implemented in the project. This
makes the work of finding out whats and whys much more difficult. So I asked
Hi all,
The discussion around wCTE during the last week or so has brought to my
attention that we don't actually have a consensus on how exactly wCTEs
should behave. The question seems to be whether or not a statement
should see the modifications of statements ran before it. While I think
On 11/10/2010 07:51 PM, Robert Haas wrote:
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 7:01 PM, Andrew Dunstanand...@dunslane.net wrote:
The current name causes constant confusion. It's a significant misnomer, and
leads people to distrust the code. There might be reasons not to change, but
you should at least
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 7:01 PM, Andrew Dunstan and...@dunslane.net wrote:
The current name causes constant confusion. It's a significant misnomer, and
leads people to distrust the code. There might be reasons not to change, but
you should at least recognize why the suggestion is being made.
On tor, 2010-10-21 at 16:59 -0400, Tom Lane wrote:
Actually, the only reason this is even up for discussion is that
there's
no configure option to set DEFAULT_PGSOCKET_DIR. If there were, and
debian were using it, then pg_config --configure would tell what I
wish
to know. I thought for a
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