Hi folks, Is there any pre-existing protocol for a company to pay for specific features to be added to PostgreSQL?
I've gotten full executive buy-in to the idea that it would be far cheaper to sponsor and pay for people to develop the enterprise features we need in Postgres than to do an Oracle migration to get those same features that we need (which would cost unholy amounts of money that we don't want to spend for our installation). All that said, I don't know if this is a feasible plan, or what the makeup is of the developers currently working on Postgres. As a practical matter, we do not have the time or people to take on this project in-house. Our company is interested in sponsoring a push to get enterprise-level scalability features into PostgreSQL, things like partitioning and organized heaps. As a practical business matter, Oracle is an option but one of last resort that we (and I) would prefer to avoid if at all possible. We see an obvious long-term benefit to making Postgres do what we need it to do than buying gobs of Oracle licenses. Are other people/companies already doing this, either officially or unofficially, and what is the general protocol for going about doing this? Cheers, -James Rogers [EMAIL PROTECTED] ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 9: the planner will ignore your desire to choose an index scan if your joining column's datatypes do not match