Thomas Lockhart writes:
Right. The two areas which come to mind are integer availability and the
timezone support (as you might know we support *three* different time
zone models). At the moment, none of the developers know the features
supported on the platforms we claim to support. Which
: PostgreSQL Hackers [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, April 24, 2002 1:14 PM
Subject: Re: [HACKERS] make report
Thomas Lockhart writes:
Right. The two areas which come to mind are integer availability and the
timezone support (as you might know we support *three* different time
zone models
Igor Kovalenko writes:
It depends. QNX4 may be used with GCC, in which case it does have long long.
I am not sure if that combination will play along with Postgres, but it
should not be assumed impossible.
The point is, it should not be assumed possible.
--
Peter Eisentraut [EMAIL
On Tue, 23 Apr 2002 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Suggestion: Why not embed this information into the binary, and
provide some way of extracting it.
I like this!
[Downside: Announcement, script kiddies: If you find option
UPDATE_DESCR_TABS=1 in the configuration information, then there's a
Thomas Lockhart [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I was thinking about something like make report which would mail the
results of ./configure to, say, the ports mailing list. We could mention
it in the text message printed at the end of the make cycle.
I think it'd be a bad idea to encourage people
Thomas Lockhart writes:
I'd like to implement *something* to help us collect information on what
platforms actually have what features. This would be useful, for
example, for figuring out whether any platforms are lacking 8 byte
integers or are missing timezone infrastructure.
I don't think
I'd like to implement *something* to help us collect information on what
platforms actually have what features. This would be useful, for
example, for figuring out whether any platforms are lacking 8 byte
integers or are missing timezone infrastructure.
I was thinking about something like make
I'd like to implement *something* to help us collect information on what
platforms actually have what features. This would be useful, for
example, for figuring out whether any platforms are lacking 8 byte
integers or are missing timezone infrastructure.
I was thinking about something like