Tom Lane wrote: > Lamar Owen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > Although this config file stuff is small potatoes compared to the > > Win32 stuff as recently discussed. And for that, please understand > > that most of the developers here consider Win32 an inferior server > > platform. In fact, Win32 _is_ an inferior server platform, at least > > in my opinion. But, if you want to do the work, and it doesn't break > > my non-Win32 server build, by all means go for it. > > Note that "doesn't break non-Win32 builds" is not really the standard > that will get applied. Ongoing readability and maintainability of the > codebase is a very high priority in my eyes, and I think in the eyes > of most of the key developers. To the extent that Win32 support can > be added without hurting those goals, I have nothing against it.
The tricky twist will be to keep good readability while taking different solution approaches for different Systems (e.g. fork() only for *NIX vs. CreateProcess() for Win). I agree that your high priority goal is a good one. Thinking about good old Unix semantics, having a higher priority means not beeing as nice as others, right? Then again, even with the lowest possible nice level a process doesn't own the CPU exclusively (so it never becomes rude). > I'll even put up with localized ugliness (see the BeOS support hacks > for an example of what I'd call localized ugliness). But I get unhappy > when there's airy handwaving about moving all static variables into some > global data structure, to take just one of the points that were under > discussion last week. That'd be a big maintainability penalty IMHO. As I understood it the idea was to put the stuff, the backends inherit from the postmaster, into a centralized place, instead of having it spread out all over the place. What's wrong with that? > As for the more general point --- my recollection of that thread was > that mlw himself was more than a bit guilty of adopting a "my way or no > way" attitude; if he sees some pushback from the other developers maybe > he should consider the possibility that he's creating his own problem. > In general this development community is one of the most civilized I've > ever seen. I don't think it's that hard to get consensus on most > topics. The consensus isn't always the same as my personal opinion... > but that's the price of being part of a community. Yeah, maybe democracy wasn't such a perfect idea at all ... Jan ;-) -- #======================================================================# # It's easier to get forgiveness for being wrong than for being right. # # Let's break this rule - forgive me. # #================================================== [EMAIL PROTECTED] # ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 6: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org