On 2017-01-26 15:45:15 -0700, David G. Johnston wrote: > On Thu, Jan 26, 2017 at 3:28 PM, Andres Freund <and...@anarazel.de> wrote: > > > I *personally* don't think it's worth > > changing all this without taking more care about backward compat than > > we're apparently willing to do. I'm ok with loosing that argument. I > > just don't think the previous concensus for a narrower change can be > > used for the wider one > > . > > > > It would probably help others if you could brain dump a bit as to the > benefit of the status-quo compared to both the 9.6 behavior and the all-in > one.
Well, I think I've lost that argument, so I'm not sure how much effort we should spent on litigating my opinion on it. But here we go: As I said somewhere upthread (when discussing the function names), I think we're playing it too fast and loose with unnecessary changes. We decided s/pg_xlog/pg_wal/ was necessary because people lost their data, and we couldn't come up with a reasonable way to change it without the name. The tradeoff is dataloss vs. dealing with directory renaming in a few lowlevel tools. So we decided to change the name. It seems breakage was unavoidable. For me the renaming of functions, binaries, etc, is different because the benefit is long-term avoidance of a bit of confusion, with the shorter term price being tool breakages and confusion because documentation/guides/... for different versions don't apply anymore, and the search terms don't help anymore. But we're still changing this, even though breakage seems avoidable. And that fits into the bigger topic of us doing minor cleanups without a lot of concern for backward compatibility, e.g. like us whacking things around in pg_stat_activity for most of the last releases - nearly all of those could have been done in a compatible manner, without even smelling that badly. I hear these complaints about postgres most frequently: 1) replication sucks. 2) way too slow on analytics queries. 3) existing admin tools suck. 4) self written admin tools (required due to 3)) constantly break. There's a lot being done on 1) and 2). There's very little in-core progress about 3). We're getting worse on 4). > I actually took your response as: "why the f**k is he talking about > camels?" and started laughing... That's good then, and let's raise a $beverage_of_choice tonight to the fallability of e-mail conversation ;) Andres -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers