Peter Eisentraut-2 wrote > On 8/21/14 11:16 AM, Tom Lane wrote: >> Heikki Linnakangas <
> hlinnakangas@ > > writes: >>> The patch also rounds a zero up to one. A naked zero with no unit is not >>> affected, but e.g if you have "log_rotation_age=0s", it will not disable >>> the feature as you might expect, but set it to 1 minute. Should we do >>> something about that? >> >> That sounds like a dealbreaker to me. There are enough places where zero >> has special meaning that we should not *ever* change zero to non-zero >> silently. > > I don't think I like this idea anyway. If something has units of an > hour and the user (perhaps misunderstanding the setting) sets it to one > second, then we shouldn't silently change that to one hour. > > If there is a problem with rounding it to zero, then we should perhaps > raise an error. (And stop treating zero specially. It's a terrible > idea.) I'm on board, from the original thread, for errors if the input cannot be converted to the parameter measurement unit cleanly. By which I mean the specified value should result in an integer being recorded without rounding. Specifying a precision less than the default unit thus becomes impossible. I don't have a problem with zero meaning disabled when appropriate since it avoids having a separate on/off GUC. That said the complaint here just seems like a bug in the supplied patch - zero is zero regardless of whether a unit is specified. The only obvious exception would be temperature but that isn't relevant here. David J. -- View this message in context: http://postgresql.1045698.n5.nabble.com/proposal-rounding-up-time-value-less-than-its-unit-tp5811102p5815770.html Sent from the PostgreSQL - hackers mailing list archive at Nabble.com. -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers