> On Dec 18, 2025, at 15:52, Chao Li <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
>> On Dec 18, 2025, at 15:43, Peter Eisentraut <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> On 18.12.25 01:22, Chao Li wrote:
>>>> On Dec 17, 2025, at 22:51, Peter Eisentraut <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>> On 15.12.25 10:16, Chao Li wrote:
>>>>> The motivation for this patch comes from my own experience. While working 
>>>>> on [1]. I added an enum-typed GUC and made a copy-and-paste mistake, 
>>>>> assigning the same numeric value to two different enum entries. This 
>>>>> resulted in confusing runtime behavior and cost me about an hour to track 
>>>>> down.
>>>> 
>>>> Why do you assign explicit values at all?
>>> Did you mean to say “duplicate” instead of “explicit”?
>> 
>> No, I meant explicit.  I didn't find an example in the thread you linked to, 
>> but I suppose you are writing something like
>> 
>> enum foo {
>> bar = 1,
>> baz = 2,
>> };
>> 
>> But why make those assignments at all.  You could just write
>> 
>> enum foo {
>> bar,
>> baz,
>> };
>> 
> 
> Oh, I got your question. That's not C enum, it’s about the GUC 
> config_enum_entry. In the reply to Zsolt, I explained what I experienced.
> 
>> Thanks for asking. The link was correct. While working on the patch, I 
>> experimented with multiple solutions, one was adding a new GUC 
>> “default_replica_identity”.
>> 
>> For that, I defined a enum in guc_table.c, with items like:
>> 
>> ```
>> “Default”, DEFAULT, false,
>> “Full”, FULL, false,
>> “None”, FULL, false, <== copy-paste mistake here
>> NULL, NULL, tue
>> ```
>> 
>> I mistakenly copy FULL to the “None” line. While testing, I did “alter 
>> database xxx set default_replica_identity = full/none”, and found that 
>> resulted the same. Mixing the fact that a GUC change doesn't take effective 
>> immediately, sometimes needing restart/reconnect, etc., I spent time 
>> tracking down the error, and finally identified the copy-paste mistake. The 
>> experience triggered the idea of adding a sanity check. With this patch, 
>> such mistake will cause postmaster fail to start, so that a developer will 
>> notice the problem in the first place. That’s why I mentioned this could be 
>> a developer-facing feature, maybe put all code inside #ifdef 
>> USE_ASSERT_CHECKING, so that it won’t impact release version at all.
> 

By the way, CF entry: https://commitfest.postgresql.org/patch/6316/

Best regards,
--
Chao Li (Evan)
HighGo Software Co., Ltd.
https://www.highgo.com/






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