Hi, On Thursday 30 January 2003 17:12, you wrote: > "Dave Page" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > I would also point out that we already list the Cygwin port of > > PostgreSQL as supported. Who ever gave that the kind of testing people > > are demanding now? I think the worst case scenario will be that our > > Win32 port is far better than the existing 'supported' solution. > > A good point --- but what this is really about is expectations. If we > support a native Windows port then people will probably think that it's > okay to run production databases on that setup; whereas I doubt many > people would think that about the Cygwin-based port. So what we need to > know is whether the platform is actually stable enough that that's a > reasonable thing to do; so that we can plaster the docs with appropriate > disclaimers if necessary. Windows, unlike the other OSes mentioned in > this thread, has a long enough and sorry enough track record that it > seems appropriate to run such tests ... > > regards, tom lane > > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- > TIP 4: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster
Ah, well - I wanted to hold off but could not. First, a disclaimer: I don't like Windows at all. There, you got it. But: it's actually quite stable if you configure it well, and don't run the 3 million available 'dang, this looks nice' tools on it. Place it in the corner, let it run only server apps, and it serves well and stable. In my experience (and I have quite some experience in letting Win machines run in heavy-duty 24/7 production floors) they will happily run and not eat data until the some hardware breaks or disks overflow, just like any OS. So, please, don't let a 'I don't like it' kind of flamewar hinder a native port. And please no more 'not for production use' warnings - see above. Make this 'not for production use on workstations'. Greetings, Joerg -- Leading SW developer - S.E.A GmbH Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] WWW: http://www.sea-gmbh.com ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 6: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org