On Fri, Jan 8, 2021 at 10:36 PM Pavel Stehule <pavel.steh...@gmail.com> wrote: > ne 19. 4. 2020 v 19:27 odesÃlatel Pavel Stehule <pavel.steh...@gmail.com> > napsal: >> last week I finished pspg 3.0 https://github.com/okbob/pspg . pspg now >> supports pipes, named pipes very well. Today the pspg can be used as pager >> for output of \watch command. Sure, psql needs attached patch. >> >> I propose new psql environment variable PSQL_WATCH_PAGER. When this variable >> is not empty, then \watch command starts specified pager, and redirect >> output to related pipe. When pipe is closed - by pager, then \watch cycle is >> leaved. >> >> If you want to test proposed feature, you need a pspg with >> cb4114f98318344d162a84b895a3b7f8badec241 commit. >> >> Then you can set your env >> >> export PSQL_WATCH_PAGER="pspg --stream" >> psql >> >> SELECT * FROM pg_stat_database; >> \watch 1 >> >> Comments, notes?
I tried this out with pspg 4.1 from my package manager. It seems really useful, especially for demos. I like it! * Set up rendering options, in particular, disable the pager, because * nobody wants to be prompted while watching the output of 'watch'. */ - myopt.topt.pager = 0; + if (!pagerpipe) + myopt.topt.pager = 0; Obsolete comment. +static bool sigpipe_received = false; This should be "static volatile sig_atomic_t", and I suppose our convention name for that variable would be got_SIGPIPE. Would it be possible to ignore SIGPIPE instead, and then rely on another way of knowing that the pager has quit? But... hmm: - long s = Min(i, 1000L); + long s = Min(i, pagerpipe ? 100L : 1000L); I haven't studied this (preexisting) polling loop, but I don't like it. I understand that it's there because on some systems, pg_usleep() won't wake up for SIGINT (^C), but now it's being used for a secondary purpose, that I haven't fully understood. After I quit pspg (by pressing q) while running \watch 10, I have to wait until the end of a 10 second cycle before it tries to write to the pipe again, unless I also press ^C. I feel like it has to be possible to achieve "precise" behaviour somehow when you quit; maybe something like waiting for readiness on the pager's stderr, or something like that -- I haven't thought hard about this and I admit that I have no idea how this works on Windows. Sometimes I see a message like this after I quit pspg: postgres=# \watch 10 input stream was closed