On 1/12/18 12:24, Alvaro Herrera wrote: > Here's a small sample pg_proc entry: > > { oid => '2147', descr => 'number of input rows for which the input > expression is not null', > n => 'count', proisagg => 't', v => 'i', p => 's', rt => 'int8', at => > 'any', s => 'aggregate_dummy' }, > > An pg_amop entry: > { opf => 'btree/integer_ops', lt => 'int2', rt => 'int2', str => '1', oper => > '<(int2,int2)', am => 'btree' }, > > Notes: > 1. this is Perl data; it is read with 'eval' without any external modules. > 2. the pg_proc entry has been compressed to two lines, to avoid > content-free lines that would easily confuse git merge, but keep line > length reasonable.
I don't think I like this. I know pg_proc.h is a pain to manage, but at least right now it's approachable programmatically. I recently proposed to patch to replace the columns proisagg and proiswindow with a combined column prokind. I could easily write a small Perl script to make that change in pg_proc.h, because the format is easy to parse and has one line per entry. With this new format, that approach would no longer work, and I don't know what would replace it. > 3. references to objects in other catalogs are by name, such as "int8" > or "btree/integer_ops" rather than OID. I think we could already do this by making more use of things like regtype and regproc. That should be an easy change to make. > 4. for each attribute, an abbreviation can be declared. In the > pg_proc sample we have "n" which stands for proname, because we have > this line: > + NameData proname BKI_ABBREV(n); I'm afraid a key value system would invite writing the attributes in random order and create a mess over time. But if we want to do it, I think we could also add it to the current BKI format. The same goes for defining default values for some columns. -- Peter Eisentraut http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/ PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services