Tomas Vondra <tomas.von...@enterprisedb.com> writes: > bsd@freebsd:~ $ tclsh8.6 > % clock scan "1/26/2010" > time value too large/small to represent
In hopes of replicating this, I tried installing FreeBSD 14-BETA2 aarch64 on my Pi 3B. This test case works fine: $ tclsh8.6 % clock scan "1/26/2010" 1264482000 $ tclsh8.7 % clock scan "1/26/2010" 1264482000 and unsurprisingly, pltcl's regression tests pass. I surmise that something is broken in BETA1 that they fixed in BETA2. plpython works too, with the python 3.9 package (and no older python). However, all is not peachy, because plperl doesn't work. Trying to CREATE EXTENSION either plperl or plperlu leads to a libperl panic: pl_regression=# create extension plperl; server closed the connection unexpectedly This probably means the server terminated abnormally before or while processing the request. The connection to the server was lost. Attempting reset: Succeeded. with this in the postmaster log: panic: pthread_key_create failed That message is certainly not ours, so it must be coming out of libperl. Another thing that seemed strange is that ecpg's preproc.o takes O(forever) to compile. I killed the build after observing that the compiler had gotten to 40 minutes of CPU time, and redid that step with PROFILE=-O0, which allowed it to compile in 20 seconds or so. (I also tried -O1, but gave up after a few minutes.) This machine can compile the main backend grammar in a minute or two, so there is something very odd there. I'm coming to the conclusion that 14-BETA is, well, beta grade. I'll be interested to see if you get the same results when you update to BETA2. regards, tom lane