1) DatabaseMetaData.getPrimaryKeys() would fail saying that there
is no
table t.
2) PreparedStatement.getObject() was missing some break statements,
which
was causing updates not to work with JBuilder (supplied by Aaron
Dunlop).
jdbc fixes from Peter.
manager to not try to split files in 2 gig chunks. It will just
try to get another block.
If applied, everything is just as before. But if LET_OS_MANAGE_FILESIZE
is defined, the chaining disappears and the file just keeps on
going, and going, and going, til the OS barfs.
Darren King
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Test Case: ----------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Solution: --------- Add this to the libpq and libpq++ Makefiles
to build shared libs:
Mike Ferrara
extern char *sys_errlist[]; #define strerror(A) (sys_errlist[(A)])
#endif /* sunos4
*/
is picked up by Solaris when the above is intended only for SunOS.
Fix Solaris. Albert Chin-A-Young
to main.c are only to add some extra includes to support some code
that's suddenly being used.
The #define ASSEMBLER is to prevent most of the code of sys/proc.h
from being included, as it ends up conflicting with some of the
postgresql definitions. This may or may not work on other versions
of Digital Unix.
Get alpha working. Yea. Dwayne Bailey
> > characters in them. Dumping and reloading using pg_dumpall >
> doesn't work with this and dumping the entire array and > > then
trying to parse it is hopeless.
Doug Gibson
Make "TABLE" optional in "LOCK TABLE" command
and "... INTO TABLE..." clause.
Explicitly parse CREATE SEQUENCE options to allow a negative integer
as an argument; this is an artifact of unary minus handling in scan.l.
Add "PASSWORD" as an allowed column identifier.
These fixes will require a "make clean install" but not a dump/reload.
a while back I posted a patch for pg_ident, the patch worked but I didn't
diagnose the problem properly.
on my compiler(gcc2.7.2) this compiles with no errors...
char buf[1000]; if(buf != '\0') {
...but it doesn't compare '\0' with the first char of buf.
There is an error in the configure script when using
--with-pgport= that will cause the compiled version of
PostgreSQL to no longer allow connections to the
new port and to treat shared memory improperly.
What happens is that if the port is changed, the configure
script defines DEF_PGPORT as "", which atoi() will return
as 0, which makes the IPC_KEY value 0. This then causes
semaphores to be allocated, but never released. Postgres
eventually returns from semget() with
"no space left on device". The source of this error could
easily be overlooked in version 6.3 since it is possible
to connect via UNIX domain sockets, and having DEF_PGPORT
defined as "0" would not be noticed until TCP was used.
The following patch is to src/interfaces/libpq of postgresql-6.3.
The purpose of the patch is to make the initialization of
const char *pgresStatus[] match the ExecStatusType enum.
6.3 postmaster is supposed to work with pre 6.3 protocol. This is true
for little endian architecture servers. But for big endian machines
such as Sparc the backward compatibility function do not work.
Attached are patches to fix the problem.
For substr() and substring() on the text data type, the relevant code is in
varlena.c. You are right, there is a problem. I have a patch which I will
apply to the source tree soon. The copy enclosed below probably does not
preserve tabs correctly so cannot be applied directly; the relevant change
is simply changing the ">=" to ">"...
It is my hope that the following "patches" to libpgtcl get included
in the next release.
See the update to the README file to get a full description of the changes.
This version of libpgtcl is completely interpreter-safe, implements the
database connection handle as a channel (no events yet, but will make it
a lot easier to do fileevents on it in the future), and supports the SQL
"copy table to stdout" and "copy table from stdin" commands, with the
I/O being from and to the connection handle. The connection and result
handles are formatted in a way to make access to the tables more efficient.
Included are patches intended for allowing PostgreSQL to handle
multi-byte charachter sets such as EUC(Extende Unix Code), Unicode and
Mule internal code. With the MB patch you can use multi-byte character
sets in regexp and LIKE. The encoding system chosen is determined at
the compile time.
To enable the MB extension, you need to define a variable "MB" in
Makefile.global or in Makefile.custom. For further information please
take a look at README.mb under doc directory.
(Note that unlike "jp patch" I do not use modified GNU regexp any
more. I changed Henry Spencer's regexp coming with PostgreSQL.)
Included are patches intended for allowing PostgreSQL to handle
multi-byte charachter sets such as EUC(Extende Unix Code), Unicode and
Mule internal code. With the MB patch you can use multi-byte character
sets in regexp and LIKE. The encoding system chosen is determined at
the compile time.
To enable the MB extension, you need to define a variable "MB" in
Makefile.global or in Makefile.custom. For further information please
take a look at README.mb under doc directory.
(Note that unlike "jp patch" I do not use modified GNU regexp any
more. I changed Henry Spencer's regexp coming with PostgreSQL.)