Noah Misch <n...@leadboat.com> writes: > On Sat, Jul 03, 2021 at 06:44:20PM -0400, Tom Lane wrote: >> That'd require buildfarm owner intervention, as well as intervention >> by users. Which seems like exporting our problems onto them. I'd >> really rather not go that way if we can avoid it.
> I like that goal, though we'll have to see how difficult it proves. As of > today, a GNU/Linux user building against static OpenLDAP will get a failure, > right? That would export work onto that user, spuriously. As a former packager for Red Hat, my response would be "you're doing it wrong". Nobody on any Linux distro should *ever* statically link code from one package into code from another, because they are going to create untold pain for themselves when (not if) the first package is updated. So I flat out reject that as a valid use-case. It may be that that ethos is not so strongly baked-in on other platforms. But I'm content to wait and see if there are complaints before rescinding the automatic test; and if there are, I'd prefer to deal with it by just backing off to running the test on Linux only. > We'd get something like 95% of the value by running the test on one Windows > buildfarm member and one non-Windows buildfarm member. True. But that just brings up the point that we aren't running the test at all on MSVC builds right now. I have no idea how to do that, do you? > ... A strategy not having either of those drawbacks would be to skip > the test if libpq.so contains a definition of libpq_unbind(). I assume you meant some OpenLDAP symbol? > If any other > dependency contains exit calls, we'd likewise probe for one symbol of that > library and skip the test if presence of that symbol reveals static linking. > (That's maintenance-prone in its own way, but a maintenance-free strategy has > not appeared.) I'm more worried about the risk of failing to detect problems at all, in case somebody fat-fingers things in a way that causes the test to be skipped everywhere. I'll keep that way in mind if we conclude that the existing way is unworkable, but so far I don't think it is. regards, tom lane