Thread

  1. ODBC configure

    Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> — 2000-06-05T00:20:58Z

    Who's maintaining the ODBC configure and build stuff?
    
    There's a grave issue with ODBC linking in all kinds of makefiles,
    templates, header files, etc. from the main Postgres configure process.
    That creates problems for both sides: The main tree couldn't care less
    what ODBC needs tested and defined since it claims to have it's own
    configure script.
    
    I don't have a problem with ODBC having it's own configure script, if
    that's what's desired, but then it needs to be used unconditionally.
    Running the standalone and the integrated show at the same time doesn't
    work.
    
    I'd be more than happy to help fixing these issues but I just want to ask
    first who knows anything about it. One particular question is where the
    authorative source is: is it the PostgreSQL CVS or is it this
    psqlodbc-x.y.z.tar.gz file, whereever that came from?
    
    (Incidentally, I think the ODBC thing is simple enough to just use
    Automake on it and be done with it. Then we don't need any templates or
    port makefiles or whatever.)
    
    -- 
    Peter Eisentraut                  Sernanders väg 10:115
    peter_e@gmx.net                   75262 Uppsala
    http://yi.org/peter-e/            Sweden
    
    
    
  2. Re: ODBC configure

    Bruce Momjian <pgman@candle.pha.pa.us> — 2000-06-05T01:36:16Z

    > I don't have a problem with ODBC having it's own configure script, if
    > that's what's desired, but then it needs to be used unconditionally.
    > Running the standalone and the integrated show at the same time doesn't
    > work.
    > 
    > I'd be more than happy to help fixing these issues but I just want to ask
    > first who knows anything about it. One particular question is where the
    
    	Nikolaidis, Byron in Baltimore, Maryland, USA
    	(byron.nikolaidis@home.com) rewrote and maintains
    	the ODBC interface for Windows. 
    
    > authorative source is: is it the PostgreSQL CVS or is it this
    > psqlodbc-x.y.z.tar.gz file, whereever that came from?
    
    Our CVS tree.
    
    > 
    > (Incidentally, I think the ODBC thing is simple enough to just use
    > Automake on it and be done with it. Then we don't need any templates or
    > port makefiles or whatever.)
    
    
    -- 
      Bruce Momjian                        |  http://www.op.net/~candle
      pgman@candle.pha.pa.us               |  (610) 853-3000
      +  If your life is a hard drive,     |  830 Blythe Avenue
      +  Christ can be your backup.        |  Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania 19026
    
    
  3. Re: ODBC configure

    Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> — 2000-06-06T16:08:16Z

    I wrote:
    
    > I don't have a problem with ODBC having it's own configure script, if
    > that's what's desired, but then it needs to be used unconditionally.
    > Running the standalone and the integrated show at the same time doesn't
    > work.
    
    Further investigation shows that the standalone build is completely broken
    and apparently no longer maintained. Thus, is there any point in trying to
    keep it?
    
    > (Incidentally, I think the ODBC thing is simple enough to just use
    > Automake on it and be done with it. Then we don't need any templates or
    > port makefiles or whatever.)
    
    FWIW, I just did tried that conversion and it's really very nice (after
    fixing some of shared-lib-on-linux-only funny business). So in case you
    wanna keep the separate build after all...
    
    
    -- 
    Peter Eisentraut                  Sernanders väg 10:115
    peter_e@gmx.net                   75262 Uppsala
    http://yi.org/peter-e/            Sweden
    
    
    
  4. Re: Re: ODBC configure

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2000-06-06T17:34:58Z

    Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> writes:
    > I wrote:
    >> I don't have a problem with ODBC having it's own configure script, if
    >> that's what's desired, but then it needs to be used unconditionally.
    >> Running the standalone and the integrated show at the same time doesn't
    >> work.
    
    > Further investigation shows that the standalone build is completely broken
    > and apparently no longer maintained. Thus, is there any point in trying to
    > keep it?
    
    AFAICS the only situation where a separate build of ODBC is really
    useful is to build a Windows executable of the ODBC driver --- but
    of course the autoconf stuff doesn't support that anyway.
    
    For Unix purposes I'd be in favor of making ODBC just another interface
    that's built as part of the main build ... but let's see what Lockhart
    has to say about it.  I think he was responsible for setting it up this
    way in the first place, so maybe he's got a good reason for it.
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
  5. Re: ODBC configure

    Thomas Lockhart <lockhart@alumni.caltech.edu> — 2000-06-13T02:03:57Z

    > Who's maintaining the ODBC configure and build stuff?
    
    Me, a little bit. I haven't changed anything in quite a while.
    
    > There's a grave issue with ODBC linking in all kinds of makefiles,
    > templates, header files, etc. from the main Postgres configure
    > process.
    
    Only for a "standalone" build afaik. An "integrated build" uses all
    features from the main tree.
    
    > That creates problems for both sides: The main tree couldn't care less
    > what ODBC needs tested and defined since it claims to have it's own
    > configure script.
    > I don't have a problem with ODBC having it's own configure script, if
    > that's what's desired, but then it needs to be used unconditionally.
    > Running the standalone and the integrated show at the same time 
    > doesn't work.
    
    Well, standalone and integrated are two separate features. We shouldn't
    strip one at the expense of the other, but it may be that the standalone
    version is completely unused? If so, we worked at this feature for no
    good purpose, and it should be ignored until someone finds a real need
    for it imho.
    
                           - Thomas
    
    
  6. Re: ODBC configure

    Peter Eisentraut <e99re41@docs.uu.se> — 2000-06-13T13:16:49Z

    On Tue, 13 Jun 2000, Thomas Lockhart wrote:
    
    > Well, standalone and integrated are two separate features. We shouldn't
    > strip one at the expense of the other, but it may be that the standalone
    > version is completely unused? If so, we worked at this feature for no
    > good purpose, and it should be ignored until someone finds a real need
    > for it imho.
    
    The standalone build is broken at least for 7.0. I see that at some point
    you tried to get the top-level configure to invoke odbc's configure
    recursively to have a "distribution in the distribution". That is
    definitely the right way to do it if you want to keep the dichotomy.
    Somehow it seems that it didn't work for you, but at least it does work
    for me. Maybe we should re-enable that?
    
    Btw., do you recall what the separate packaging was intended for?
    
    -- 
    Peter Eisentraut                  Sernanders väg 10:115
    peter_e@gmx.net                   75262 Uppsala
    http://yi.org/peter-e/            Sweden
    
    
    
  7. Re: ODBC configure

    Thomas Lockhart <lockhart@alumni.caltech.edu> — 2000-06-13T13:39:43Z

    > The standalone build is broken at least for 7.0. I see that at some 
    > point you tried to get the top-level configure to invoke odbc's 
    > configure recursively to have a "distribution in the distribution". 
    > That is definitely the right way to do it if you want to keep the 
    > dichotomy. Somehow it seems that it didn't work for you, but at least 
    > it does work for me. Maybe we should re-enable that?
    
    Your call. But afaik the "distro in the distro" technique does not allow
    for a separate package, without requiring a lot of duplication in the
    configure script at both levels.
    
    > Btw., do you recall what the separate packaging was intended for?
    
    The separate packaging was intended to address the point that, for some
    apps, the *only* package needed to access a remote Postgres database was
    the ODBC driver itself. So we wanted a way to build and install it
    without requiring any other parts of Postgres to be installed.
    
    At the time, I didn't have a *strong* feeling that this was essential,
    but others suggested that it was.
    
    Frankly, istm that the same kind of person who would want to build a
    standalone ODBC driver might also be running a system for which RPMs or
    some other packaging system is available, so perhaps we should back away
    from the standalone capability on Unix systems. The small grey area in
    users' knowledge and capabilities between "can build and install from
    the source distro" to "needs a pre-built package" may be more trouble
    than it is worth.
    
                         - Thomas
    
    
  8. Re: ODBC configure

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2000-06-13T15:01:48Z

    Thomas Lockhart <lockhart@alumni.caltech.edu> writes:
    >> Btw., do you recall what the separate packaging was intended for?
    
    > The separate packaging was intended to address the point that, for some
    > apps, the *only* package needed to access a remote Postgres database was
    > the ODBC driver itself. So we wanted a way to build and install it
    > without requiring any other parts of Postgres to be installed.
    
    I don't have a strong feeling that this is particularly essential for
    ODBC alone.  It's been suggested more than once that it might be nice
    to be able to build clients without building the server --- but that
    would cover libpq, psql, etc, not just the ODBC interface.  (Bruce,
    shouldn't there be a TODO item for that?)
    
    It seems clear that the standalone ODBC config is suffering bit-rot,
    and that that will be its normal state of existence given that no one
    takes care to make it track changes to the top-level configure files.
    So I'm in favor of ripping it out.
    
    I would like to see us offer a client-only build procedure someday,
    but I don't feel much urgency about it.
    
    			regards, tom lane