"Brett Sutton" <bsut...@noojee.com.au> writes: > Essentially if you peform: > create user Abc; > Postgres creates a user abc (as expected).
Yeah, because *in the context of SQL* the standard mandates case-folding. But note that the actual user name here is "abc". Not "Abc". > The problem is that you cannot the use mixed case name in a jdbc url.import I'm not sure that JDBC would be doing you any favors to try to support that. If it were to fold case for usernames in connection URLs, then you'd have a problem logging into users that actually *were* mixed case. The next step would be to invent a quoting convention for usernames in URLs, and then you just have a mess. We went around on this many years ago in the context of what psql should do with user and database names supplied on the command line. The eventual conclusion, which has worked well since then, was that such names should be taken as-is and not folded. Now that was partially forced by the fact that the shell would interfere with any plausible quoting convention, but I think it's still a good precedent for handling user and database names in other non-SQL contexts such as URLs. regards, tom lane -- Sent via pgsql-bugs mailing list (pgsql-bugs@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-bugs