[HACKERS] Re: [ANNOUNCE] PostgreSQL v7.1 Release Candidate 4

2001-04-09 Thread Thomas Lockhart

 Where can I get a Postscript version docs for 7.1?

I'll start building hardcopy in the next day or two, and hope that it
will be done quickly (more quickly that in previous releases). Will keep
y'all informed on the progress...

  - Thomas

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[HACKERS] Re: [ANNOUNCE] PostgreSQL v7.1 Release Candidate 4

2001-04-08 Thread Tatsuo Ishii

Where can I get a Postscript version docs for 7.1?
--
Tatsuo Ishii

 Ladies and Gentlemen ...
 
 Its been a long, arduous, up hill battle to get to this point, with all of
 the changes since v7.0 was released, but we're finally there ...
 
 
 The PostgreSQL Global Development Group is *pleased* to announce the
 availability of PostgreSQL v7.1 Release Candidate 4, the long awaited
 successor to v7.0.
 
 
 Before anyone asks what a 'Release Candidate' is, and what happened to
 1-3 ... a Release Candidate is what the developers have decided is going
 to be the Release, based on no known bugs remaining, but want to get more
 general testing.
 
 If, by Friday, April 13th, there have been no bugs reported, all that will
 happen is that rc4 will get renamed as the official release, no
 repackaging or anything ...
 
 What happened to 1-3?  We packaged 1, one of the developers came across a
 bug before an announcement went out, so we didn't announce ... similar to
 the other 2.
 
 Please NOTE that this is *not* the official release ... this is what we
 believe, at this time, is going to be the official release, based on
 extensive testing over the past several months, but if someone reports a
 bug based on this, it will be addressed and a new package built ...
 
 What does v7.1 provide that v7.0 didn't?  From our HISTORY file:
 
 
 Major changes in this release:
 
 Write-ahead Log (WAL) - To maintain database consistency in case
 of an operating system crash, previous releases of PostgreSQL have forced
 all data modifications to disk before each transaction commit.  With WAL,
 only one log file must be flushed to disk, greatly improving performance.
 If you have been using -F in previous releases to disable disk flushes,
 you may want to consider discontinuing its use.
 
 TOAST - Previous releases had a compiled-in row length limit,
 typically 8 - 32 kB.  This limit made storage of long text fields
 difficult.  With TOAST, long rows of any length can be stored with good
 performance.
 
 Outer Joins - We now support outer joins.  The UNION/NOT IN
 workaround for outer joins is no longer required.  We use the SQL92 outer
 join syntax.
 
 Function Manager - The previous C function manager did not handle
 NULLs properly, nor did it support 64-bit CPU's (Alpha).  The new function
 manager does.  You can continue using your old custom functions, but you
 may want to rewrite them in the future to use the new function manager
 call interface.
 
 Complex Queries - A large number of complex queries that were
 unsupported in previous releases now work.  Many combinations of views,
 aggregates, UNION, LIMIT, cursors, subqueries, and inherited tables now
 work properly. Inherited tables are now accessed by default.  Subqueries
 in FROM are now supported.
 =
 
 For a more complete list of New Features and Bugs Fixed, please read the
 HISTORY segment available at:
 
   ftp://ftp.postgresql.org/pub/README.v7_1
 
 Source code is available at ftp://ftp.postgresql.org/pub/v7.1 ...
 
 Please report any bugs that you encounter to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 
 Marc G. Fournier   ICQ#7615664   IRC Nick: Scrappy
 Systems Administrator @ hub.org
 primary: [EMAIL PROTECTED]   secondary: scrappy@{freebsd|postgresql}.org
 
 
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