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765 lines
34 KiB
Plaintext
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Developer's Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) for PostgreSQL
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Last updated: Sun Mar 13 14:27:45 EST 2005
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Current maintainer: Bruce Momjian (pgman@candle.pha.pa.us)
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The most recent version of this document can be viewed at
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http://www.postgresql.org/files/documentation/faqs/FAQ_DEV.html.
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_________________________________________________________________
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General Questions
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1.1) How do I get involved in PostgreSQL development?
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1.2) What development environment is required to develop code?
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1.3) What areas need work?
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1.4) What do I do after choosing an item to work on?
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1.5) Where can I learn more about the code?
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1.6) I've developed a patch, what next?
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1.7) How do I download/update the current source tree?
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1.8) How do I test my changes?
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1.9) What tools are available for developers?
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1.10) What books are good for developers?
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1.11) What is configure all about?
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1.12) How do I add a new port?
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1.13) Why don't you use threads/raw devices/async-I/O, <insert your
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favorite wizz-bang feature here>?
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1.14) How are RPM's packaged?
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1.15) How are CVS branches handled?
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1.16) Where can I get a copy of the SQL standards?
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1.17) Where can I get technical assistance?
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1.18) How do I get involved in PostgreSQL web site development?
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Technical Questions
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2.1) How do I efficiently access information in tables from the
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backend code?
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2.2) Why are table, column, type, function, view names sometimes
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referenced as Name or NameData, and sometimes as char *?
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2.3) Why do we use Node and List to make data structures?
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2.4) I just added a field to a structure. What else should I do?
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2.5) Why do we use palloc() and pfree() to allocate memory?
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2.6) What is ereport()?
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2.7) What is CommandCounterIncrement()?
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_________________________________________________________________
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General Questions
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1.1) How do I get involved in PostgreSQL development?
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Download the code and have a look around. See 1.7.
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Subscribe to and read the pgsql-hackers mailing list (often termed
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'hackers'). This is where the major contributors and core members of
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the project discuss development.
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1.2) What development environment is required to develop code?
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PostgreSQL is developed mostly in the C programming language. It also
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makes use of Yacc and Lex.
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The source code is targeted at most of the popular Unix platforms and
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the Windows environment (XP, Windows 2000, and up).
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Most developers make use of the open source development tool chain. If
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you have contributed to open source software before, you will probably
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be familiar with these tools. They include: GCC (http://gcc.gnu.org,
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GDB (www.gnu.org/software/gdb/gdb.html), autoconf
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(www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/) AND GNU make
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(www.gnu.org/software/make/make.html.
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Developers using this tool chain on Windows make use of MingW (see
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http://www.mingw.org/).
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Some developers use compilers from other software vendors with mixed
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results.
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Developers who are regularly rebuilding the source often pass the
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--enable-depend flag to configure. The result is that when you make a
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modification to a C header file, all files depend upon that file are
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also rebuilt.
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1.3) What areas need work?
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Outstanding features are detailed in the TODO list. This is located in
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doc/TODO in the source distribution or at
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http://developer.postgresql.org/todo.php.
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You can learn more about these features by consulting the archives,
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the SQL standards and the recommend texts (see 1.10).
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1.4) What do I do after choosing an item to work on?
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Send an email to pgsql-hackers with a proposal for what you want to do
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(assuming your contribution is not trivial). Working in isolation is
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not advisable: others may be working on the same TODO item; you may
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have misunderstood the TODO item; your approach may benefit from the
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review of others.
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A web site is maintained for patches that are ready to be applied,
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http://momjian.postgresql.org/cgi-bin/pgpatches, and those that are
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being kept for the next release,
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http://momjian.postgresql.org/cgi-bin/pgpatches2.
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1.5) Where can I learn more about the code?
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Other than documentation in the source tree itself, you can find some
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papers/presentations discussing the code at
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http://www.postgresql.org/developer.
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1.6) I've developed a patch, what next?
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Generate the patch in contextual diff format. If you are unfamiliar
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with this, you may find the script src/tools/makediff/difforig useful.
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Ensure that your patch is generated against the most recent version of
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the code. If it is a patch adding new functionality, the most recent
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version is cvs HEAD; if it is a bug fix, this will be the most
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recently version of the branch which suffers from the bug (for more on
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branches in PostgreSQL, see 1.15).
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Finally, submit the patch to pgsql-patches@postgresql.org. It will be
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reviewed by other contributors to the project and may be either
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accepted or sent back for further work.
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1.7) How do I download/update the current source tree?
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There are several ways to obtain the source tree. Occasional
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developers can just get the most recent source tree snapshot from
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ftp://ftp.postgresql.org.
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Regular developers may want to take advantage of anonymous access to
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our source code management system. The source tree is currently hosted
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in CVS. For details of how to obtain the source from CVS see
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http://developer.postgresql.org/docs/postgres/cvs.html.
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1.8) How do I test my changes?
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Basic system testing
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The easiest way to test your code is to ensure that it builds against
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the latest version of the code and that it does not generate compiler
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warnings.
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It is worth advised that you pass --enable-cassert to configure. This
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will turn on assertions with in the source which will often show us
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bugs because they cause data corruption of segmentation violations.
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This generally makes debugging much easier.
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Then, perform run time testing via psql.
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Regression test suite
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The next step is to test your changes against the existing regression
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test suite. To do this, issue "make check" in the root directory of
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the source tree. If any tests failure, investigate.
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If you've deliberately changed existing behavior, this change may
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cause a regression test failure but not any actual regression. If so,
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you should also patch the regression test suite.
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Other run time testing
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Some developers make use of tools such as valgrind
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(http://valgrind.kde.org) for memory testing, gprof (which comes with
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the GNU binutils suite) and oprofile
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(http://oprofile.sourceforge.net/) for profiling and other related
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tools.
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What about unit testing, static analysis, model checking...?
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There have been a number of discussions about other testing frameworks
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and some developers are exploring these ideas.
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1.9) What tools are available for developers?
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First, all the files in the src/tools directory are designed for
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developers.
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RELEASE_CHANGES changes we have to make for each release
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backend description/flowchart of the backend directories
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ccsym find standard defines made by your compiler
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copyright fixes copyright notices
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entab converts tabs to spaces, used by pgindent
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find_static finds functions that could be made static
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find_typedef finds typedefs in the source code
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find_badmacros finds macros that use braces incorrectly
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fsync a script to provide information about the cost of cache
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syncing system calls
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make_ctags make vi 'tags' file in each directory
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make_diff make *.orig and diffs of source
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make_etags make emacs 'etags' files
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make_keywords make comparison of our keywords and SQL'92
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make_mkid make mkid ID files
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pgcvslog used to generate a list of changes for each release
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pginclude scripts for adding/removing include files
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pgindent indents source files
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pgtest a semi-automated build system
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thread a thread testing script
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In src/include/catalog:
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unused_oids a script which generates unused OIDs for use in system
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catalogs
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duplicate_oids finds duplicate OIDs in system catalog definitions
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If you point your browser at the tools/backend/index.html file, you
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will see few paragraphs describing the data flow, the backend
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components in a flow chart, and a description of the shared memory
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area. You can click on any flowchart box to see a description. If you
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then click on the directory name, you will be taken to the source
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directory, to browse the actual source code behind it. We also have
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several README files in some source directories to describe the
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function of the module. The browser will display these when you enter
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the directory also. The tools/backend directory is also contained on
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our web page under the title How PostgreSQL Processes a Query.
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Second, you really should have an editor that can handle tags, so you
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can tag a function call to see the function definition, and then tag
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inside that function to see an even lower-level function, and then
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back out twice to return to the original function. Most editors
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support this via tags or etags files.
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Third, you need to get id-utils from ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/id-utils/
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By running tools/make_mkid, an archive of source symbols can be
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created that can be rapidly queried.
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Some developers make use of cscope, which can be found at
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http://cscope.sf.net/. Others use glimpse, which can be found at
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http://webglimpse.net/.
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tools/make_diff has tools to create patch diff files that can be
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applied to the distribution. This produces context diffs, which is our
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preferred format.
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Our standard format is to indent each code level with one tab, where
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each tab is four spaces. You will need to set your editor to display
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tabs as four spaces:
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vi in ~/.exrc:
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set tabstop=4
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set sw=4
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more:
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more -x4
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less:
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less -x4
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emacs:
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M-x set-variable tab-width
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or
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(c-add-style "pgsql"
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'("bsd"
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(indent-tabs-mode . t)
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(c-basic-offset . 4)
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(tab-width . 4)
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(c-offsets-alist .
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((case-label . +)))
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)
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nil ) ; t = set this style, nil = don't
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(defun pgsql-c-mode ()
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(c-mode)
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(c-set-style "pgsql")
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)
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and add this to your autoload list (modify file path in macro):
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(setq auto-mode-alist
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(cons '("\\`/home/andrew/pgsql/.*\\.[chyl]\\'" . pgsql-c-mode)
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auto-mode-alist))
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or
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/*
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* Local variables:
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* tab-width: 4
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* c-indent-level: 4
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* c-basic-offset: 4
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* End:
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*/
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pgindent will the format code by specifying flags to your operating
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system's utility indent. This article describes the value of a
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consistent coding style.
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pgindent is run on all source files just before each beta test period.
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It auto-formats all source files to make them consistent. Comment
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blocks that need specific line breaks should be formatted as block
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comments, where the comment starts as /*------. These comments will
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not be reformatted in any way.
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pginclude contains scripts used to add needed #include's to include
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files, and removed unneeded #include's.
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When adding system types, you will need to assign oids to them. There
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is also a script called unused_oids in pgsql/src/include/catalog that
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shows the unused oids.
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1.10) What books are good for developers?
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I have four good books, An Introduction to Database Systems, by C.J.
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Date, Addison, Wesley, A Guide to the SQL Standard, by C.J. Date, et.
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al, Addison, Wesley, Fundamentals of Database Systems, by Elmasri and
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Navathe, and Transaction Processing, by Jim Gray, Morgan, Kaufmann
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There is also a database performance site, with a handbook on-line
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written by Jim Gray at http://www.benchmarkresources.com..
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1.11) What is configure all about?
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The files configure and configure.in are part of the GNU autoconf
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package. Configure allows us to test for various capabilities of the
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OS, and to set variables that can then be tested in C programs and
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Makefiles. Autoconf is installed on the PostgreSQL main server. To add
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options to configure, edit configure.in, and then run autoconf to
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generate configure.
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When configure is run by the user, it tests various OS capabilities,
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stores those in config.status and config.cache, and modifies a list of
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*.in files. For example, if there exists a Makefile.in, configure
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generates a Makefile that contains substitutions for all @var@
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parameters found by configure.
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When you need to edit files, make sure you don't waste time modifying
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files generated by configure. Edit the *.in file, and re-run configure
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to recreate the needed file. If you run make distclean from the
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top-level source directory, all files derived by configure are
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removed, so you see only the file contained in the source
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distribution.
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1.12) How do I add a new port?
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There are a variety of places that need to be modified to add a new
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port. First, start in the src/template directory. Add an appropriate
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entry for your OS. Also, use src/config.guess to add your OS to
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src/template/.similar. You shouldn't match the OS version exactly. The
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configure test will look for an exact OS version number, and if not
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found, find a match without version number. Edit src/configure.in to
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add your new OS. (See configure item above.) You will need to run
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autoconf, or patch src/configure too.
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Then, check src/include/port and add your new OS file, with
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appropriate values. Hopefully, there is already locking code in
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src/include/storage/s_lock.h for your CPU. There is also a
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src/makefiles directory for port-specific Makefile handling. There is
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a backend/port directory if you need special files for your OS.
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1.13) Why don't you use threads/raw devices/async-I/O, <insert your favorite
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wizz-bang feature here>?
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There is always a temptation to use the newest operating system
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features as soon as they arrive. We resist that temptation.
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First, we support 15+ operating systems, so any new feature has to be
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well established before we will consider it. Second, most new
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wizz-bang features don't provide dramatic improvements. Third, they
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usually have some downside, such as decreased reliability or
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additional code required. Therefore, we don't rush to use new features
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but rather wait for the feature to be established, then ask for
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testing to show that a measurable improvement is possible.
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As an example, threads are not currently used in the backend code
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because:
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* Historically, threads were unsupported and buggy.
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* An error in one backend can corrupt other backends.
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* Speed improvements using threads are small compared to the
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remaining backend startup time.
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* The backend code would be more complex.
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So, we are not ignorant of new features. It is just that we are
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cautious about their adoption. The TODO list often contains links to
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discussions showing our reasoning in these areas.
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1.14) How are RPMs packaged?
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This was written by Lamar Owen:
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2001-05-03
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As to how the RPMs are built -- to answer that question sanely
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requires me to know how much experience you have with the whole RPM
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paradigm. 'How is the RPM built?' is a multifaceted question. The
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obvious simple answer is that I maintain:
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1. A set of patches to make certain portions of the source tree
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'behave' in the different environment of the RPMset;
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2. The initscript;
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3. Any other ancillary scripts and files;
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4. A README.rpm-dist document that tries to adequately document both
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the differences between the RPM build and the WHY of the
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differences, as well as useful RPM environment operations (like,
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using syslog, upgrading, getting postmaster to start at OS boot,
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etc);
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5. The spec file that throws it all together. This is not a trivial
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undertaking in a package of this size.
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I then download and build on as many different canonical distributions
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as I can -- currently I am able to build on Red Hat 6.2, 7.0, and 7.1
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on my personal hardware. Occasionally I receive opportunity from
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certain commercial enterprises such as Great Bridge and PostgreSQL,
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Inc. to build on other distributions.
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I test the build by installing the resulting packages and running the
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regression tests. Once the build passes these tests, I upload to the
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postgresql.org ftp server and make a release announcement. I am also
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responsible for maintaining the RPM download area on the ftp site.
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You'll notice I said 'canonical' distributions above. That simply
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means that the machine is as stock 'out of the box' as practical --
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that is, everything (except select few programs) on these boxen are
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installed by RPM; only official Red Hat released RPMs are used (except
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in unusual circumstances involving software that will not alter the
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build -- for example, installing a newer non-RedHat version of the Dia
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diagramming package is OK -- installing Python 2.1 on the box that has
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Python 1.5.2 installed is not, as that alters the PostgreSQL build).
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The RPM as uploaded is built to as close to out-of-the-box pristine as
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is possible. Only the standard released 'official to that release'
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compiler is used -- and only the standard official kernel is used as
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well.
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For a time I built on Mandrake for RedHat consumption -- no more.
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Nonstandard RPM building systems are worse than useless. Which is not
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to say that Mandrake is useless! By no means is Mandrake useless --
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unless you are building Red Hat RPMs -- and Red Hat is useless if
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you're trying to build Mandrake or SuSE RPMs, for that matter. But I
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would be foolish to use 'Lamar Owen's Super Special RPM Blend Distro
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0.1.2' to build for public consumption! :-)
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I _do_ attempt to make the _source_ RPM compatible with as many
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distributions as possible -- however, since I have limited resources
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(as a volunteer RPM maintainer) I am limited as to the amount of
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testing said build will get on other distributions, architectures, or
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systems.
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And, while I understand people's desire to immediately upgrade to the
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newest version, realize that I do this as a side interest -- I have a
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regular, full-time job as a broadcast
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engineer/webmaster/sysadmin/Technical Director which occasionally
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prevents me from making timely RPM releases. This happened during the
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early part of the 7.1 beta cycle -- but I believe I was pretty much on
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the ball for the Release Candidates and the final release.
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I am working towards a more open RPM distribution -- I would dearly
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love to more fully document the process and put everything into CVS --
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once I figure out how I want to represent things such as the spec file
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in a CVS form. It makes no sense to maintain a changelog, for
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instance, in the spec file in CVS when CVS does a better job of
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changelogs -- I will need to write a tool to generate a real spec file
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from a CVS spec-source file that would add version numbers, changelog
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entries, etc to the result before building the RPM. IOW, I need to
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rethink the process -- and then go through the motions of putting my
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long RPM history into CVS one version at a time so that version
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history information isn't lost.
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As to why all these files aren't part of the source tree, well, unless
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there was a large cry for it to happen, I don't believe it should.
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PostgreSQL is very platform-agnostic -- and I like that. Including the
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RPM stuff as part of the Official Tarball (TM) would, IMHO, slant that
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agnostic stance in a negative way. But maybe I'm too sensitive to
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that. I'm not opposed to doing that if that is the consensus of the
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core group -- and that would be a sneaky way to get the stuff into CVS
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:-). But if the core group isn't thrilled with the idea (and my
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instinct says they're not likely to be), I am opposed to the idea --
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not to keep the stuff to myself, but to not hinder the
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platform-neutral stance. IMHO, of course.
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Of course, there are many projects that DO include all the files
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necessary to build RPMs from their Official Tarball (TM).
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1.15) How are CVS branches managed?
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This was written by Tom Lane:
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2001-05-07
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If you just do basic "cvs checkout", "cvs update", "cvs commit", then
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you'll always be dealing with the HEAD version of the files in CVS.
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That's what you want for development, but if you need to patch past
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stable releases then you have to be able to access and update the
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"branch" portions of our CVS repository. We normally fork off a branch
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for a stable release just before starting the development cycle for
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the next release.
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The first thing you have to know is the branch name for the branch you
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are interested in getting at. To do this, look at some long-lived
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file, say the top-level HISTORY file, with "cvs status -v" to see what
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the branch names are. (Thanks to Ian Lance Taylor for pointing out
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that this is the easiest way to do it.) Typical branch names are:
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REL7_1_STABLE
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REL7_0_PATCHES
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REL6_5_PATCHES
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OK, so how do you do work on a branch? By far the best way is to
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create a separate checkout tree for the branch and do your work in
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that. Not only is that the easiest way to deal with CVS, but you
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really need to have the whole past tree available anyway to test your
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work. (And you *better* test your work. Never forget that dot-releases
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tend to go out with very little beta testing --- so whenever you
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commit an update to a stable branch, you'd better be doubly sure that
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it's correct.)
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Normally, to checkout the head branch, you just cd to the place you
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want to contain the toplevel "pgsql" directory and say
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cvs ... checkout pgsql
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To get a past branch, you cd to wherever you want it and say
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cvs ... checkout -r BRANCHNAME pgsql
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For example, just a couple days ago I did
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mkdir ~postgres/REL7_1
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cd ~postgres/REL7_1
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cvs ... checkout -r REL7_1_STABLE pgsql
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and now I have a maintenance copy of 7.1.*.
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When you've done a checkout in this way, the branch name is "sticky":
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CVS automatically knows that this directory tree is for the branch,
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and whenever you do "cvs update" or "cvs commit" in this tree, you'll
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fetch or store the latest version in the branch, not the head version.
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Easy as can be.
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So, if you have a patch that needs to apply to both the head and a
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recent stable branch, you have to make the edits and do the commit
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twice, once in your development tree and once in your stable branch
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tree. This is kind of a pain, which is why we don't normally fork the
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tree right away after a major release --- we wait for a dot-release or
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two, so that we won't have to double-patch the first wave of fixes.
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1.16) Where can I get a copy of the SQL standards?
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There are three versions of the SQL standard: SQL-92, SQL:1999, and
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SQL:2003. They are endorsed by ANSI and ISO. Draft versions can be
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downloaded from:
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* SQL-92 http://www.contrib.andrew.cmu.edu/~shadow/sql/sql1992.txt
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* SQL:1999
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http://www.cse.iitb.ac.in/dbms/Data/Papers-Other/SQL1999/ansi-iso-
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9075-2-1999.pdf
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* SQL:2003 http://www.wiscorp.com/sql/sql_2003_standard.zip
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Some SQL standards web pages are:
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* http://troels.arvin.dk/db/rdbms/links/#standards
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* http://www.wiscorp.com/SQLStandards.html
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* http://www.contrib.andrew.cmu.edu/~shadow/sql.html#syntax (SQL-92)
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* http://dbs.uni-leipzig.de/en/lokal/standards.pdf (paper)
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1.17) Where can I get technical assistance?
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Many technical questions held by those new to the code have been
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answered on the pgsql-hackers mailing list - the archives of which can
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be found at http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/.
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If you cannot find discussion or your particular question, feel free
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to put it to the list.
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Major contributors also answer technical questions, including
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questions about development of new features, on IRC at
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irc.freenode.net in the #postgresql channel.
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1.18) How do I get involved in PostgreSQL web site development?
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PostgreSQL website development is discussed on the
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pgsql-www@postgresql.org mailing list. The is a project page where the
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source code is available at
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http://gborg.postgresql.org/project/pgweb/projdisplay.php , the code
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for the next version of the website is under the "portal" module. You
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will also find code for the "techdocs" website if you would like to
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contribute to that. A temporary todo list for current website
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development issues is available at http://xzilla.postgresql.org/todo
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Technical Questions
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2.1) How do I efficiently access information in tables from the backend code?
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You first need to find the tuples(rows) you are interested in. There
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are two ways. First, SearchSysCache() and related functions allow you
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to query the system catalogs. This is the preferred way to access
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system tables, because the first call to the cache loads the needed
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rows, and future requests can return the results without accessing the
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base table. The caches use system table indexes to look up tuples. A
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list of available caches is located in
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src/backend/utils/cache/syscache.c.
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src/backend/utils/cache/lsyscache.c contains many column-specific
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cache lookup functions.
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The rows returned are cache-owned versions of the heap rows.
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Therefore, you must not modify or delete the tuple returned by
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SearchSysCache(). What you should do is release it with
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ReleaseSysCache() when you are done using it; this informs the cache
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that it can discard that tuple if necessary. If you neglect to call
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ReleaseSysCache(), then the cache entry will remain locked in the
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cache until end of transaction, which is tolerable but not very
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desirable.
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If you can't use the system cache, you will need to retrieve the data
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directly from the heap table, using the buffer cache that is shared by
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all backends. The backend automatically takes care of loading the rows
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into the buffer cache.
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Open the table with heap_open(). You can then start a table scan with
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heap_beginscan(), then use heap_getnext() and continue as long as
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HeapTupleIsValid() returns true. Then do a heap_endscan(). Keys can be
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assigned to the scan. No indexes are used, so all rows are going to be
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compared to the keys, and only the valid rows returned.
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You can also use heap_fetch() to fetch rows by block number/offset.
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While scans automatically lock/unlock rows from the buffer cache, with
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heap_fetch(), you must pass a Buffer pointer, and ReleaseBuffer() it
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when completed.
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Once you have the row, you can get data that is common to all tuples,
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like t_self and t_oid, by merely accessing the HeapTuple structure
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entries. If you need a table-specific column, you should take the
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HeapTuple pointer, and use the GETSTRUCT() macro to access the
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table-specific start of the tuple. You then cast the pointer as a
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Form_pg_proc pointer if you are accessing the pg_proc table, or
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Form_pg_type if you are accessing pg_type. You can then access the
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columns by using a structure pointer:
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((Form_pg_class) GETSTRUCT(tuple))->relnatts
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You must not directly change live tuples in this way. The best way is
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to use heap_modifytuple() and pass it your original tuple, and the
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values you want changed. It returns a palloc'ed tuple, which you pass
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to heap_replace(). You can delete tuples by passing the tuple's t_self
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to heap_destroy(). You use t_self for heap_update() too. Remember,
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tuples can be either system cache copies, which may go away after you
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call ReleaseSysCache(), or read directly from disk buffers, which go
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away when you heap_getnext(), heap_endscan, or ReleaseBuffer(), in the
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heap_fetch() case. Or it may be a palloc'ed tuple, that you must
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pfree() when finished.
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2.2) Why are table, column, type, function, view names sometimes referenced
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as Name or NameData, and sometimes as char *?
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Table, column, type, function, and view names are stored in system
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tables in columns of type Name. Name is a fixed-length,
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null-terminated type of NAMEDATALEN bytes. (The default value for
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NAMEDATALEN is 64 bytes.)
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typedef struct nameData
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{
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char data[NAMEDATALEN];
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} NameData;
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typedef NameData *Name;
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Table, column, type, function, and view names that come into the
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backend via user queries are stored as variable-length,
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null-terminated character strings.
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Many functions are called with both types of names, ie. heap_open().
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Because the Name type is null-terminated, it is safe to pass it to a
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function expecting a char *. Because there are many cases where
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on-disk names(Name) are compared to user-supplied names(char *), there
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are many cases where Name and char * are used interchangeably.
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2.3) Why do we use Node and List to make data structures?
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We do this because this allows a consistent way to pass data inside
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the backend in a flexible way. Every node has a NodeTag which
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specifies what type of data is inside the Node. Lists are groups of
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Nodes chained together as a forward-linked list.
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Here are some of the List manipulation commands:
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lfirst(i), lfirst_int(i), lfirst_oid(i)
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return the data (a point, integer and OID respectively) at list
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element i.
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lnext(i)
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return the next list element after i.
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foreach(i, list)
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loop through list, assigning each list element to i. It is
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important to note that i is a List *, not the data in the List
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element. You need to use lfirst(i) to get at the data. Here is
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a typical code snippet that loops through a List containing Var
|
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*'s and processes each one:
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List *list;
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ListCell *i;
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foreach(i, list)
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{
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Var *var = lfirst(i);
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/* process var here */
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}
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lcons(node, list)
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add node to the front of list, or create a new list with node
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if list is NIL.
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lappend(list, node)
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add node to the end of list. This is more expensive that lcons.
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nconc(list1, list2)
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Concat list2 on to the end of list1.
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length(list)
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return the length of the list.
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nth(i, list)
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return the i'th element in list.
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lconsi, ...
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There are integer versions of these: lconsi, lappendi, etc.
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Also versions for OID lists: lconso, lappendo, etc.
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You can print nodes easily inside gdb. First, to disable output
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truncation when you use the gdb print command:
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(gdb) set print elements 0
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Instead of printing values in gdb format, you can use the next two
|
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commands to print out List, Node, and structure contents in a verbose
|
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format that is easier to understand. List's are unrolled into nodes,
|
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and nodes are printed in detail. The first prints in a short format,
|
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and the second in a long format:
|
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(gdb) call print(any_pointer)
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(gdb) call pprint(any_pointer)
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The output appears in the postmaster log file, or on your screen if
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you are running a backend directly without a postmaster.
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2.4) I just added a field to a structure. What else should I do?
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The structures passing around from the parser, rewrite, optimizer, and
|
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executor require quite a bit of support. Most structures have support
|
|
routines in src/backend/nodes used to create, copy, read, and output
|
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those structures (in particular, the files copyfuncs.c and
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equalfuncs.c. Make sure you add support for your new field to these
|
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files. Find any other places the structure may need code for your new
|
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field. mkid is helpful with this (see 1.9).
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2.5) Why do we use palloc() and pfree() to allocate memory?
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|
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palloc() and pfree() are used in place of malloc() and free() because
|
|
we find it easier to automatically free all memory allocated when a
|
|
query completes. This assures us that all memory that was allocated
|
|
gets freed even if we have lost track of where we allocated it. There
|
|
are special non-query contexts that memory can be allocated in. These
|
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affect when the allocated memory is freed by the backend.
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2.6) What is ereport()?
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ereport() is used to send messages to the front-end, and optionally
|
|
terminate the current query being processed. The first parameter is an
|
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ereport level of DEBUG (levels 1-5), LOG, INFO, NOTICE, ERROR, FATAL,
|
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or PANIC. NOTICE prints on the user's terminal and the postmaster
|
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logs. INFO prints only to the user's terminal and LOG prints only to
|
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the server logs. (These can be changed from postgresql.conf.) ERROR
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prints in both places, and terminates the current query, never
|
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returning from the call. FATAL terminates the backend process. The
|
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remaining parameters of ereport are a printf-style set of parameters
|
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to print.
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ereport(ERROR) frees most memory and open file descriptors so you
|
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don't need to clean these up before the call.
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2.7) What is CommandCounterIncrement()?
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|
|
Normally, transactions can not see the rows they modify. This allows
|
|
UPDATE foo SET x = x + 1 to work correctly.
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|
|
However, there are cases where a transactions needs to see rows
|
|
affected in previous parts of the transaction. This is accomplished
|
|
using a Command Counter. Incrementing the counter allows transactions
|
|
to be broken into pieces so each piece can see rows modified by
|
|
previous pieces. CommandCounterIncrement() increments the Command
|
|
Counter, creating a new part of the transaction.
|