On Thu, May 12, 2005 at 10:39:14AM -0400, Tom Lane wrote: > "Magnus Hagander" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > Another thought I had along that line was use a different signal to > > simply do a "query cancel" and set a global flag that is more or less > > "get out when you're done with query cancel". Then if that flag is set, > > just close the connection and proceed as if the client dropped the > > connection - that has to be a well tested codepath. > > This is pretty much exactly what kill -TERM does today, and the point is > that the code path has only been extensively tested in the context of > database-wide shutdown. No one can honestly say that they are sure > there are no resource leaks, locks left unreleased, stuff like that. > That kind of problem wouldn't be visible after a shutdown, but it will > become visible if backends are killed individually with -TERM. > > Now in theory there are no bugs and this'll work fine. What disturbs me > is the lack of testing by anyone who knows what to look for ...
Would a script/program that starts connections, runs a query, and then kills the backend repeatedly suffice? -- Jim C. Nasby, Database Consultant [EMAIL PROTECTED] Give your computer some brain candy! www.distributed.net Team #1828 Windows: "Where do you want to go today?" Linux: "Where do you want to go tomorrow?" FreeBSD: "Are you guys coming, or what?" ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 2: you can get off all lists at once with the unregister command (send "unregister YourEmailAddressHere" to [EMAIL PROTECTED])