On Fri, Aug 29, 2003 at 12:06:59AM -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote: > "tuning documents" is *not* a valid reason for not doing this ... that's > like saying "we can make it faster on some operating systems, but because > we're going to have to modify the tuning documents, we're not going to do > it" ... wait, that is exactly what you are saying ...
No, it's a perfectly valid reason for not doing this (in the present, half-baked form that has been presented). PostgreSQL is at the moment fairly simple to configure. Adding a significant amount of complexity to the configuration / tuning process and making a given configuration non-portable between different platforms and different compiles of PostgreSQL is something I'd like to avoid, if possible. And I think it's possible to avoid it, it's just that the original patch makes no attempt to do so. For example, why does shared_buffers need to be specified in disk pages, anyway? ISTM it could just as easily be specified in bytes, and PostgreSQL could internally round up/down to the nearest multiple of the BLCKSZ that this instance of PostgreSQL happened to be compiled with. > Now, Tom made one point in his original that *was* valid ... a table > definition made under a 16k BLCKSZ db will not necessarily work under an > 8k compiled server .. the example that he made to me was that a table of > float8 under a 16k server could have N fields, but if you tried to > dump/import that table into an 8k BLCKSZ one with that max # of fields, it > would fail ... that is a *serious* concern against doing this ... Uh, yeah -- I was talking about that as well. I said "it needs to be completely transparent to the user, from a functionality perspective". If changing the BLCKSZ makes things faster or slower, then fine; if it changes the meaning of various random configuration parameters, makes certain schemas work or not work, and makes other changes to postgres functionality, then it's not fine. -Neil ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 2: you can get off all lists at once with the unregister command (send "unregister YourEmailAddressHere" to [EMAIL PROTECTED])