Re: Hope for a new PostgreSQL era?

From: Marc Cousin <cousinmarc(at)gmail(dot)com>
To: Craig Ringer <ringerc(at)ringerc(dot)id(dot)au>
Cc: Simon Riggs <simon(at)2ndQuadrant(dot)com>, Chris Travers <chris(dot)travers(at)gmail(dot)com>, pgsql-general(at)postgresql(dot)org, Scott Marlowe <scott(dot)marlowe(at)gmail(dot)com>, "Rodrigo E(dot) De León Plicet" <rdeleonp(at)gmail(dot)com>
Subject: Re: Hope for a new PostgreSQL era?
Date: 2011-12-09 10:26:07
Message-ID: 20111209112607.4584b6d6@marco-dalibo
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Le Fri, 09 Dec 2011 11:11:12 +0800,
Craig Ringer <ringerc(at)ringerc(dot)id(dot)au> a écrit :

> On 12/08/2011 08:27 PM, Simon Riggs wrote:
> > On Thu, Dec 8, 2011 at 11:24 AM, Craig
> > Ringer<ringerc(at)ringerc(dot)id(dot)au> wrote:
> >
> >> Areas in which Pg seems significantly less capable include:
> > Please can you explain the features Oracle has in these area, I'm
> > not clear. Thanks.
> >
> Marc has, as I was hoping, done so much better than I could. Most of
> what I know is 2nd hand from Oracle users - I'm not one myself.
>
> It's interesting to see the view that the resource manager for query
> and user prioritisation is hard to use in practice. That's not
> something I'd heard before, but I can't say I'm entirely surprised
> given how complicated problems around lock management and priority
> inversion are to get right even in a system where there *aren't*
> free-form dynamic user-defined queries running.

The complexity, at least for me, came from the user interface (at
least a dozen of stored procedures with a complex syntax) to set up and
monitor the resource manager.

I don't think it manages the priority inversion problems, just CPU
priorities. I asked the Oracle trainer, who wasn't sure either :)

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