proc_exit time. I discovered that if the frontend closes the connection
when you're inside a transaction block, there is nothing ensuring that
temp files go away ... I wonder whether proc_exit ought to try to do an
explicit transaction abort?
a generalized module 'tuplesort.c' that can sort either HeapTuples or
IndexTuples, and is not tied to execution of a Sort node. Clean up
memory leakages in sorting, and replace nbtsort.c's private implementation
of mergesorting with calls to tuplesort.c.
recycle storage within sort temp file on a block-by-block basis. This
reduces peak disk usage to essentially just the volume of data being
sorted, whereas it had been about 4x the data volume before.
>From the ORACLE 7 SQL Language Reference Manual:
-----------------------------------------------------
COMMENT
Purpose:
To add a comment about a table, view, snapshot, or
column into the data dictionary.
Prerequisites:
The table, view, or snapshot must be in your own
schema
or you must have COMMENT ANY TABLE system privilege.
Syntax:
COMMENT ON [ TABLE table ] |
[ COLUMN table.column] IS 'text'
You can effectively drop a comment from the database
by setting it to the empty string ''.
-----------------------------------------------------
Example:
COMMENT ON TABLE workorders IS
'Maintains base records for workorder information';
COMMENT ON COLUMN workorders.hours IS
'Number of hours the engineer worked on the task';
to drop a comment:
COMMENT ON COLUMN workorders.hours IS '';
The current patch will simply perform the insert into
pg_description, as per the TODO. And, of course, when
the table is dropped, any comments relating to it
or any of its attributes are also dropped. I haven't
looked at the ODBC source yet, but I do know from
an ODBC client standpoint that the standard does
support the notion of table and column comments.
Hopefully the ODBC driver is already fetching these
values from pg_description, but if not, it should be
trivial.
Hope this makes the grade,
Mike Mascari
(mascarim@yahoo.com)
BufFile so that it handles multi-segment temporary files transparently.
This allows sorts and hashes to work with data exceeding 2Gig (or whatever
the local limit on file size is). Change psort.c to use relative seeks
instead of absolute seeks for backwards scanning, so that it won't fail
when the data volume exceeds 2Gig.
I have changed a bit the makefiles for the win32 port - the *.def files
(created when building shared libraries) are now clean from
Makefile.shlib.
I have also removed "-g" from CFLAGS in the "cygwin32" template - it can
be
enabled when running configure.
Dan
database, but they get truncated at the first NUL by lo_read
when they are read back. The reason for this is that lo_read in
Pg.xs is using the default:
OUTPUT:
RETVAL
buf
which uses C's strlen() to work out the length of the scalar.
The code ought to read something more like:
OUTPUT:
RETVAL
buf sv_setpvn((SV*)ST(2), buf, RETVAL);
I am not sure if this needs to be done on both lo_read methods
in this file, but I changed both and have not since had any
problems with truncated BLOBs.
Douglas Thomson <dougt@mugc.cc.monash.edu.au>
Cygwin snapshots (tested on 990115 which is recommended to use - it fixes
some errors in B20.1)
And I have another patch for including <sys/ipc.h> before <sys/sem.h> in
backend/storage/lmgr/proc.c - it is required due the design of cygipc
headers
Dan
Move around a few other keywords which were not in the right category.
DEC and SESSION_USER are not yet committed to gram.y,
since I'm in the middle of working on JOIN syntax too.