On 3/15/17 3:00 AM, Tsunakawa, Takayuki wrote: > From: pgsql-hackers-ow...@postgresql.org >> [mailto:pgsql-hackers-ow...@postgresql.org] On Behalf Of David Steele >>> But it might be worth thinking about whether we want to encourage >>> people to do manual chmod's at all; that's fairly easy to get wrong, >>> particularly given the difference in X bits that should be applied to >>> files and directories. Another approach that could be worth >>> considering is a PGC_POSTMASTER GUC with just two states (group access >>> or not) and make it the postmaster's responsibility to do the >>> equivalent of chmod -R to make the file tree match the GUC. I think >>> we do a tree scan anyway for other purposes, so correcting any wrong >>> file permissions might not be much added work in the normal case. >> >> The majority of scanning is done in recovery (to find and remove unlogged >> tables) and I'm not sure we would want to add that overhead to normal >> startup. > > I'm on David's side, too. I don't postmaster to always scan all files at > startup. > > On the other hand, just doing "chmod -R $PGDATA" is not enough, because chmod > doesn't follow the symbolic links. Symbolic links are used for pg_tblspc/* > and pg_wal at least. FYI, MySQL's manual describes the pithole like this:
Good point - I think we'll need to add that to the docs as well. > I think we also need to describe the procedure carefully. That said, it > would be best to make users aware of a configuration alternative (group > access) with enough documentation when they first build the database or > upgrade the database cluster. Just describing the alternative only in initdb > reference page would result in being unaware of the better configuration, > like --data-checksum. I'm working on a new approach incorporating everybody's suggestions and enhanced documentation. It should be ready on Monday. -- -David da...@pgmasters.net -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers