Joe Conway <m...@joeconway.com> writes: > It isn't clear to me if having a hook in the timeout handler is a > nonstarter -- perhaps a comment with suitable warning for prospective > extension authors is enough? Anyone else want to weigh in on this issue > specifically?
It doesn't seem like a great place for a hook, because the list of stuff you could safely do there would be mighty short, possibly the empty set. Write to shared memory? Not too safe. Write to a file? Even less. Write to local memory? Pointless, because we're about to _exit(1). Pretty much anything I can think of that you'd want to do is something we've already decided the core code can't safely do, and putting it in a hook won't make it safer. If someone wants to argue for this hook, I'd like to see a credible example of a *safe* use-case, keeping in mind the points raised in the comments in BackendInitialize and process_startup_packet_die. regards, tom lane