Galy Lee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Let's come to the core issue we care about: do we need the stop-on-dime > feature to stop vacuum immediately? As my previous opinion: if there > are some problems for long running vacuum, yes we *did need* to stop > vacuum immediately.
There's always SIGINT. The question you are avoiding is whether it's really worth adding a lot of overhead to make vacuum able to stop without losing some work. > I admit that the implementation is much complex, but I can not > see any big problems to save the dead tuples out and read it in > again(like two phase commit does). The big problem is that this creates a number of failure scenarios that didn't exist before. Your proposal to store the dead-tuple TIDs in a separate file scares the heck out of me: there are any number of ways for that to get out-of-sync with the underlying relation. If you don't see the point here, go back to re-read the documentation about PITR and how one creates a base backup and exactly why that behavior is proof against crashes. regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 5: don't forget to increase your free space map settings