- Avoid forcing table name to lower case in FixupBlobXrefs
- Removed fmtId calls for all ArchiveEntry name fields. This fixes
quoting problems in trigger enable/disable code for mixed case
table names, and avoids commands like 'pg_restore -t '"TblA"'
O_SYNC, or O_DSYNC (as available on a given platform). Add GUC parameter
to control sync method.
Also, add defense to XLogWrite to prevent it from going nuts if passed
a target write position that's past the end of the buffers so far filled
by XLogInsert.
Provide an extenisible scheme of encoding conversion.
As the first step, SJIS and BIG5 are supported.
From now on multibyte people would be happy to use
this psqlodbc driver.
Eiji Tokuya e-tokuya@mail.sankyo-unyu.co.jp
I'm not sure that it's really necessary to save insert events when there
are only after update or delete triggers, but certainly it's wrong for
COPY to behave differently from an INSERT query.
detect case that next page in log came from an older run than the prior
page. This avoids the necessity to re-zero the log after recovery from
a crash, which is good because we need not risk destroying valuable log
information.
This forces another initdb since yesterday :-(. Need to get that log
reset utility done...
ODBC driver on Windows 9X/ME/NT/2K when using the later versions of the
driver that don't have the Installshield installation:
1) Install psqlodbc.dll in to C:\Windows\System or C:\Winnt\System32
2) Add the registry settings in the attached file using regedit.
A useful addition to src/interfaces/odbc perhaps?
Regards, Dave.
* Store two past checkpoint locations, not just one, in pg_control.
On startup, we fall back to the older checkpoint if the newer one
is unreadable. Also, a physical copy of the newest checkpoint record
is kept in pg_control for possible use in disaster recovery (ie,
complete loss of pg_xlog). Also add a version number for pg_control
itself. Remove archdir from pg_control; it ought to be a GUC
parameter, not a special case (not that it's implemented yet anyway).
* Suppress successive checkpoint records when nothing has been entered
in the WAL log since the last one. This is not so much to avoid I/O
as to make it actually useful to keep track of the last two
checkpoints. If the things are right next to each other then there's
not a lot of redundancy gained...
* Change CRC scheme to a true 64-bit CRC, not a pair of 32-bit CRCs
on alternate bytes. Polynomial borrowed from ECMA DLT1 standard.
* Fix XLOG record length handling so that it will work at BLCKSZ = 32k.
* Change XID allocation to work more like OID allocation. (This is of
dubious necessity, but I think it's a good idea anyway.)
* Fix a number of minor bugs, such as off-by-one logic for XLOG file
wraparound at the 4 gig mark.
* Add documentation and clean up some coding infelicities; move file
format declarations out to include files where planned contrib
utilities can get at them.
* Checkpoint will now occur every CHECKPOINT_SEGMENTS log segments or
every CHECKPOINT_TIMEOUT seconds, whichever comes first. It is also
possible to force a checkpoint by sending SIGUSR1 to the postmaster
(undocumented feature...)
* Defend against kill -9 postmaster by storing shmem block's key and ID
in postmaster.pid lockfile, and checking at startup to ensure that no
processes are still connected to old shmem block (if it still exists).
* Switch backends to accept SIGQUIT rather than SIGUSR1 for emergency
stop, for symmetry with postmaster and xlog utilities. Clean up signal
handling in bootstrap.c so that xlog utilities launched by postmaster
will react to signals better.
* Standalone bootstrap now grabs lockfile in target directory, as added
insurance against running it in parallel with live postmaster.
tuples inserted/deleted/updated in a single transaction. On my machine,
this reduced the time to delete 80000 tuples in a foreign-key-referencing
table from ~15min to ~8sec.