Re: PostgreSQL missing in SuSE 10?

From: Devrim GUNDUZ <devrim(at)gunduz(dot)org>
To: Tom Lane <tgl(at)sss(dot)pgh(dot)pa(dot)us>
Cc: Gregory Youngblood <pgcluster(at)netio(dot)org>, pgsql-general(at)postgresql(dot)org, Reinhard Max <max(at)suse(dot)de>
Subject: Re: PostgreSQL missing in SuSE 10?
Date: 2005-10-09 15:59:27
Message-ID: Pine.LNX.4.63.0510091854390.18153@mail.kivi.com.tr
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Hi,

On Sun, 9 Oct 2005, Tom Lane wrote:

> Gregory Youngblood <pgcluster(at)netio(dot)org> writes:
>> I've been using SuSE and PostgreSQL for a fairly long time. Recently
>> (last 12 months), I've noticed that the 9.x (9.2 and 9.3 specifically)
>> versions of SuSE do not include PostgreSQL on the CD install -- only on
>> the DVD. At first (9.2), I thought it was just a glitch that didn't get
>> fixed in 9.3. Now, it seems to have been deliberate.
>
> The right thing to do is complain.

It might also be good to ask Reinhard about this. (CC'ed to him)

Reinhard?
--
Devrim GUNDUZ
Kivi Bilişim Teknolojileri - http://www.kivi.com.tr
devrim~gunduz.org, devrim~PostgreSQL.org, devrim.gunduz~linux.org.tr
http://www.gunduz.org
>From pgsql-general-owner(at)postgresql(dot)org Sun Oct 9 13:09:48 2005
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To: "Raymond O'Donnell" <rod(at)iol(dot)ie>
Cc: pgsql-general(at)postgresql(dot)org
Subject: Re: Comand line or postgresql.conf?
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Comments: In-reply-to "Raymond O'Donnell" <rod(at)iol(dot)ie>
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Date: Sun, 09 Oct 2005 12:09:41 -0400
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From: Tom Lane <tgl(at)sss(dot)pgh(dot)pa(dot)us>
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"Raymond O'Donnell" <rod(at)iol(dot)ie> writes:
> If I want to get dates in the European format, what's the difference
> between (a) including -o -e on the postmaster command line and (b)
> uncommenting datestyle='iso,dmy' in postgresql.conf?

> If there's no difference, which is the preferred/recommended method?

Command-line switches are mostly useful for quick-and-dirty manual
starts of the postmaster; which is something people do for testing
purposes, but certainly not in production environments. In a production
environment you should almost always edit postgresql.conf, for these
reasons:

1. The postgresql.conf file allows better documentation of what
you did.

2. To insert a command-line switch, you probably have to modify the
postmaster-launching script, which means you risk losing the change
during software updates.

3. Command-line switches override postgresql.conf entries, which means
it'll be impossible to change your mind later by editing postgresql.conf
and SIGHUP'ing; only a postmaster shutdown and restart can fix it if
you change your mind about something specified on the command line.
(Of course, this doesn't carry any weight for stuff that requires a
restart to change anyway, such as shared_buffers; but for stuff that
can be changed without a restart, such as the default datestyle,
I think it's foolish to foreclose the option.)

regards, tom lane

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