Here is a first patch to cleanup the backend side of libpq.
This patch removes all external dependencies on the "Pfin" and "Pfout" that
are declared in pqcomm.h. These variables are also changed to "static" to
make sure.
Almost all the change is in the handler of the "copy" command - most other
areas of the backend already used the correct functions.
This change will make the way for cleanup of the internal stuff there - now
that all the functions accessing the file descriptors are confined to a
single directory.
> tprintf.patch
>
> tprintf.patch
>
> adds functions and macros which implement a conditional trace package
> with the ability to change flags and numeric options of running
> backends at runtime.
> Options/flags can be specified in the command line and/or read from
> the file pg_options in the data directory.
According to man page under FreeBSD for sys_errlist[], strerror() should be
used instead...not sure if this will break other systems, so only changing
two files for now, and we'll see what "errors" it turns up
Subject: [HACKERS] linux/alpha patches
These patches lay the groundwork for a Linux/Alpha port. The port doesn't
actually work unless you tweak the linker to put all the pointers in the
first 32 bits of the address space, but it's at least a start. It
implements the test-and-set instruction in Alpha assembly, and also fixes
a lot of pointer-to-integer conversions, which is probably good anyway.
In particular, no more compiled-in default for PGDATA or LIBDIR. Commands
that need them need either invocation options or environment variables.
PGPORT default is hardcoded as 5432, but overrideable with options or
environment variables.
and found out that one of the patches is a show stopper for
compiling under a strict ansi package.
Please make sure the following fix makes it into the 1.02.1
release...
Thanks.
-Kurt
This is a patch to prevent an endless loop occuring in the Postgres backend
when a 'warning' error condition generates another warning error contition
in the handler code.
Submitted by: Chris Dunlop, <chris@onthe.net.au>