Thread

  1. Release cycle length

    Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> — 2003-11-17T23:46:38Z

    The time from release 7.3 to release 7.4 was 355 days, an all-time high.
    We really need to shorten that.  We already have a number of significant
    improvements in 7.5 now, and several good ones coming up in the next few
    weeks.  We cannot let people wait 1 year for that.  I suggest that we aim
    for a 6 month cycle, consisting of approximately 4 months of development
    and 2 months of cleanup.  So the start of the next beta could be the 1st
    of March.  What do you think?
    
    -- 
    Peter Eisentraut   peter_e@gmx.net
    
    
    
  2. Re: Release cycle length

    Marc G. Fournier <scrappy@postgresql.org> — 2003-11-18T00:24:21Z

    On Tue, 18 Nov 2003, Peter Eisentraut wrote:
    
    > The time from release 7.3 to release 7.4 was 355 days, an all-time high.
    > We really need to shorten that.  We already have a number of significant
    > improvements in 7.5 now, and several good ones coming up in the next few
    > weeks.  We cannot let people wait 1 year for that.  I suggest that we aim
    > for a 6 month cycle, consisting of approximately 4 months of development
    > and 2 months of cleanup.  So the start of the next beta could be the 1st
    > of March.  What do you think?
    
    That is the usual goal *nod*  Same goal we try for each release, and never
    quite seem to get there ... we'll try 'yet again' with v7.5 though, as we
    always do :)
    
    
  3. Re: Release cycle length

    Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> — 2003-11-18T00:44:48Z

    Marc G. Fournier writes:
    
    > That is the usual goal *nod*  Same goal we try for each release, and never
    > quite seem to get there ... we'll try 'yet again' with 7.5 though, as we
    > always do :)
    
    I don't see how we could have tried for a 4-month development period and
    ended up with an 8-month period.  Something went *really* wrong there.
    Part of that may have been that few people were actually aware of that
    schedule.
    
    -- 
    Peter Eisentraut   peter_e@gmx.net
    
    
    
  4. Re: Release cycle length

    Marc G. Fournier <scrappy@postgresql.org> — 2003-11-18T00:47:08Z

    On Tue, 18 Nov 2003, Peter Eisentraut wrote:
    
    > Marc G. Fournier writes:
    >
    > > That is the usual goal *nod*  Same goal we try for each release, and never
    > > quite seem to get there ... we'll try 'yet again' with 7.5 though, as we
    > > always do :)
    >
    > I don't see how we could have tried for a 4-month development period and
    > ended up with an 8-month period.  Something went *really* wrong there.
    > Part of that may have been that few people were actually aware of that
    > schedule.
    
    Everyone on  -hackers should have been aware of it, as its always
    discussed at the end of the previous release cycle ... and I don't think
    we've hit a release cycle yet that has actually stayed in the 4 month
    period :(  Someone is always 'just sitting on something that is almost
    done' at the end that pushes it further then originally planned ...
    
    
    
    
  5. Re: Release cycle length

    Marc G. Fournier <scrappy@postgresql.org> — 2003-11-18T00:58:26Z

    Just did a quick search on archives, and the original plan was for a
    release in mid-2003, which means the beta would have been *at least* a
    month before that, so beta starting around May:
    
    http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2002-11/msg00975.php
    
    On Mon, 17 Nov 2003, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
    
    > On Tue, 18 Nov 2003, Peter Eisentraut wrote:
    >
    > > Marc G. Fournier writes:
    > >
    > > > That is the usual goal *nod*  Same goal we try for each release, and never
    > > > quite seem to get there ... we'll try 'yet again' with 7.5 though, as we
    > > > always do :)
    > >
    > > I don't see how we could have tried for a 4-month development period and
    > > ended up with an 8-month period.  Something went *really* wrong there.
    > > Part of that may have been that few people were actually aware of that
    > > schedule.
    >
    > Everyone on  -hackers should have been aware of it, as its always
    > discussed at the end of the previous release cycle ... and I don't think
    > we've hit a release cycle yet that has actually stayed in the 4 month
    > period :(  Someone is always 'just sitting on something that is almost
    > done' at the end that pushes it further then originally planned ...
    >
    >
    >
    
    ----
    Marc G. Fournier           Hub.Org Networking Services (http://www.hub.org)
    Email: scrappy@hub.org           Yahoo!: yscrappy              ICQ: 7615664
    
    
  6. Re: Release cycle length

    Neil Conway <neilc@samurai.com> — 2003-11-18T01:08:41Z

    Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> writes:
    > The time from release 7.3 to release 7.4 was 355 days, an all-time
    > high.  We really need to shorten that.
    
    Why is that?
    
    -Neil
    
    
    
  7. Re: Release cycle length

    Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> — 2003-11-18T01:12:09Z

    Marc G. Fournier writes:
    
    > Just did a quick search on archives, and the original plan was for a
    > release in mid-2003, which means the beta would have been *at least* a
    > month before that, so beta starting around May:
    >
    > http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2002-11/msg00975.php
    
    That was a Bruce Momjian estimate mentioned in passing, not an affirmed
    plan.  Also, I think Bruce's estimates are notoriously off by years. ;-)
    
    -- 
    Peter Eisentraut   peter_e@gmx.net
    
    
    
  8. Re: Release cycle length

    Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> — 2003-11-18T01:21:45Z

    Neil Conway writes:
    
    > Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> writes:
    > > The time from release 7.3 to release 7.4 was 355 days, an all-time
    > > high.  We really need to shorten that.
    >
    > Why is that?
    
    First, if you develop something today, the first time users would
    realistically get a hand at it would be January 2005.  Do you want that?
    Don't you want people to use your code?  We fix problems, but people must
    wait a year for the fix?
    
    Second, the longer a release cycle, the more problems amass.  People just
    forget what they were doing in the beginning, no one is around to fix the
    problems introduced earlier, no one remembers anything when it comes time
    to write release notes.  The longer you develop, the more parallel efforts
    are underway, and it becomes impossible to synchronize them to a release
    date.  People are not encouraged to provide small, well-thought-out,
    modular improvements.  Instead, they break everything open and worry about
    it later.  At the end, it's always a rush to close these holes.
    
    Altogether, it's a loss for both developers and users.
    
    -- 
    Peter Eisentraut   peter_e@gmx.net
    
    
    
  9. Re: Release cycle length

    Christopher Kings-Lynne <chriskl@familyhealth.com.au> — 2003-11-18T01:46:06Z

    > The time from release 7.3 to release 7.4 was 355 days, an all-time high.
    > We really need to shorten that.  We already have a number of significant
    > improvements in 7.5 now, and several good ones coming up in the next few
    > weeks.  We cannot let people wait 1 year for that.  I suggest that we aim
    > for a 6 month cycle, consisting of approximately 4 months of development
    > and 2 months of cleanup.  So the start of the next beta could be the 1st
    > of March.  What do you think?
    
    So long as pg_dump object ordering is an early fix to make upgrades 
    rather more painless, I'm all for it :)
    
    Does anyone have a comparison of how many lines of code were added in 
    this release compared to previous?
    
    Chris
    
    
    
    
  10. Re: Release cycle length

    Christopher Kings-Lynne <chriskl@familyhealth.com.au> — 2003-11-18T01:48:11Z

    > Everyone on  -hackers should have been aware of it, as its always
    > discussed at the end of the previous release cycle ... and I don't think
    > we've hit a release cycle yet that has actually stayed in the 4 month
    > period :(  Someone is always 'just sitting on something that is almost
    > done' at the end that pushes it further then originally planned ...
    
    I think that the core just need to be tough on it, that's all.
    
    If we have pre-published target dates, then everyone knows if they can 
    get their code in or not for that date.
    
    Chris
    
    
    
    
  11. Re: Release cycle length

    Joshua D. Drake <jd@commandprompt.com> — 2003-11-18T01:58:20Z

    Hello,
    
       Personally I am for long release cycles, at least for major releases. 
    In fact
    as of 7.4 I think there should possibly be a slow down in releases with more
    incremental releases (minor releases) throughout the year.
    
       People are running their companies and lives off of PostgreSQL, they 
    should
    be able to rely on a specific feature set, and support from the community
    for longer.
    
    Sincerely,
    
    Joshua Drake
    
    
    Peter Eisentraut wrote:
    
    >Neil Conway writes:
    >
    >  
    >
    >>Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> writes:
    >>    
    >>
    >>>The time from release 7.3 to release 7.4 was 355 days, an all-time
    >>>high.  We really need to shorten that.
    >>>      
    >>>
    >>Why is that?
    >>    
    >>
    >
    >First, if you develop something today, the first time users would
    >realistically get a hand at it would be January 2005.  Do you want that?
    >Don't you want people to use your code?  We fix problems, but people must
    >wait a year for the fix?
    >
    >Second, the longer a release cycle, the more problems amass.  People just
    >forget what they were doing in the beginning, no one is around to fix the
    >problems introduced earlier, no one remembers anything when it comes time
    >to write release notes.  The longer you develop, the more parallel efforts
    >are underway, and it becomes impossible to synchronize them to a release
    >date.  People are not encouraged to provide small, well-thought-out,
    >modular improvements.  Instead, they break everything open and worry about
    >it later.  At the end, it's always a rush to close these holes.
    >
    >Altogether, it's a loss for both developers and users.
    >
    >  
    >
    
    -- 
    Command Prompt, Inc., home of Mammoth PostgreSQL - S/ODBC and S/JDBC
    Postgresql support, programming shared hosting and dedicated hosting.
    +1-503-222-2783 - jd@commandprompt.com - http://www.commandprompt.com
    Editor-N-Chief - PostgreSQl.Org - http://www.postgresql.org
    
    
    
    
  12. Re: Release cycle length

    Marc G. Fournier <scrappy@postgresql.org> — 2003-11-18T02:22:12Z

    On Tue, 18 Nov 2003, Christopher Kings-Lynne wrote:
    
    > > Everyone on  -hackers should have been aware of it, as its always
    > > discussed at the end of the previous release cycle ... and I don't think
    > > we've hit a release cycle yet that has actually stayed in the 4 month
    > > period :(  Someone is always 'just sitting on something that is almost
    > > done' at the end that pushes it further then originally planned ...
    >
    > I think that the core just need to be tough on it, that's all.
    >
    > If we have pre-published target dates, then everyone knows if they can
    > get their code in or not for that date.
    
    Right now, I believe we are looking at an April 1st beta, and a May 1st
    related ... those are, as always, *tentative* dates that will become more
    fine-tuned as those dates become nearer ...
    
    April 1st, or 4 mos from last release, tends to be what we aim for with
    all releases ... as everyone knows, we don't necessarily acheive it, but
    ...
    
    Actually, historically, it looks like we've always been close to 12 months
    between releases ... 7.0->7.1: ~11mos, 7.1->7.2: ~10mos, 7.2->7.3: ~9 mos,
    and 7.3->7.4: ~12mos ... so, on average, we're dealing with an ~10mos
    release cycle for the past 3 years ...
    
    svr1# ls -l */postgresql-7.?.tar.gz
    -rw-rw-r--  1 pgsql  pgsql   9173732 May  9  2000 v7.0/postgresql-7.0.tar.gz
    -rw-r--r--  1 pgsql  pgsql   8088678 Apr 13  2001 v7.1/postgresql-7.1.tar.gz
    -rw-r--r--  1 pgsql  pgsql   9180168 Feb  4  2002 v7.2/postgresql-7.2.tar.gz
    -rw-r--r--  1 pgsql  pgsql  11059455 Nov 27  2002 v7.3/postgresql-7.3.tar.gz
    -rw-r--r--  1 pgsql  pgsql  12311256 Nov 16 17:57 v7.4/postgresql-7.4.tar.gz
    
    
    
  13. Re: Release cycle length

    Douglas McNaught <doug@mcnaught.org> — 2003-11-18T02:26:09Z

    "Joshua D. Drake" <jd@commandprompt.com> writes:
    
    > Hello,
    > 
    >    Personally I am for long release cycles, at least for major releases. 
    > In fact
    > as of 7.4 I think there should possibly be a slow down in releases with more
    > incremental releases (minor releases) throughout the year.
    
    That would pretty much mean changing the "minor releases only for
    serious bugfixes" philosphy.  Is that what you are advocating?
    
    >    People are running their companies and lives off of PostgreSQL,
    > they should be able to rely on a specific feature set, and support
    > from the community for longer.
    
    If 7.3.4 works for you, there's nothing to stop you running it until
    the end of time...  If you can't patch in bugfixes yourself, you
    should be willing to pay for support.  Commercial companies like Red
    Hat don't support their releases indefinitely for free; why should the
    PG community be obligated to?
    
    Also, we very rarely remove features--AUTOCOMMIT on the server is
    about the only one I can think of.
    
    -Doug
    
    
  14. Re: Release cycle length

    Christopher Kings-Lynne <chriskl@familyhealth.com.au> — 2003-11-18T02:32:56Z

    > Right now, I believe we are looking at an April 1st beta, and a May 1st
    > related ... those are, as always, *tentative* dates that will become more
    > fine-tuned as those dates become nearer ...
    > 
    > April 1st, or 4 mos from last release, tends to be what we aim for with
    > all releases ... as everyone knows, we don't necessarily acheive it, but
    
    Make it April 2nd, otherwise everyone will think it's a joke :P
    
    Chris
    
    
    
    
  15. Re: Release cycle length

    Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> — 2003-11-18T02:33:25Z

    Marc G. Fournier writes:
    
    > Right now, I believe we are looking at an April 1st beta, and a May 1st
    > related ... those are, as always, *tentative* dates that will become more
    > fine-tuned as those dates become nearer ...
    
    OK, here start the problems.  Development already started, so April 1st is
    already 5 months development.  Add 1 month because no one is willing to
    hold people to these dates.  So that's 6 months.  Then for 6 months of
    development, you need at least 2 months of beta.  So we're already in the
    middle of July, everyone is on vacation, and we'll easily reach the 9
    months -- instead of 6.
    
    -- 
    Peter Eisentraut   peter_e@gmx.net
    
    
    
  16. Re: Release cycle length

    Neil Conway <neilc@samurai.com> — 2003-11-18T02:33:30Z

    Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> writes:
    > First, if you develop something today, the first time users would
    > realistically get a hand at it would be January 2005.  Do you want
    > that?  Don't you want people to use your code?
    
    Sure :-) But I don't mind a long release cycle if it is better for
    users.
    
    > We fix problems, but people must wait a year for the fix?
    
    A couple points:
    
      (a) Critical problems can of course be fixed via point releases in
          the current stable release series
    
      (b) As PostgreSQL gets more mature, the number of absolutely show
          stopping features or bug fixes in a new release gets
          smaller. For example, I'd argue that neither 7.3 or 7.4 include
          a single feature that is as important as 7.2's lazy VACUUM or
          7.1's WAL. There are lots of great features, but the set of
          absolutely essential new features tends to grow smaller over
          time. I'd wager that for the vast majority of our user base,
          PostgreSQL already works well.
    
      (c) As PostgreSQL gets more mature, putting out stable,
          production-worthy releases becomes even more important. In
          theory, longer release cycles contribute to higher quality
          releases: we have more time to implement new features properly,
          polish rough edges and document things, test and find bugs, and
          ensure that features we've implemented earlier in the release
          cycle are properly thought out, and so forth.
    
          Note that whether or not we are using those 355 days effectively
          is another story -- it may well be true that there are we could
          make parts of the development process much more efficient.
    
    Furthermore, longer release cycles reduce, to some degree, the pain of
    upgrades. Unless we make substantial improvements to the upgrade story
    any time soon, I wouldn't be surprised if many DBAs are relieved at
    only needing to upgrade once a year.
    
    > The longer you develop, the more parallel efforts are underway, and
    > it becomes impossible to synchronize them to a release date.
    
    I think this is inherent to the way PostgreSQL is developed: Tom has
    previously compared PostgreSQL release scheduling to herding cats :-)
    As long as much of the work on the project is done by volunteers in
    their spare time, ISTM that coordinating everyone toward a single
    release date is going to be difficult, if not impossible. The length
    of the release cycle doesn't really effect this, IMHO.
    
    > People are not encouraged to provide small, well-thought-out,
    > modular improvements.
    
    I agree we can always do better when it comes to code quality. I think
    the NetBSD team puts it well:
    
        Some systems seem to have the philosophy of "If it works, it's
        right". In that light NetBSD could be described as "It doesn't
        work /unless/ it's right".
    
    That said, I don't see how this is related to the release schedule. In
    fact, one could argue that a longer release schedule gives new
    features a longer "gestation period" during which developers can
    ensure that they are well-thought out and implemented properly.
    
    > Altogether, it's a loss for both developers and users.
    
    I don't think it's nearly as clear-cut as that. Both types of release
    scheduling have their benefits and their drawbacks. My main point is
    really that a short release cycle is not an unqualified good (not to
    mention that in the past we've been completely unable to actually
    *execute* a short release cycle, making this whole discussion a little
    academic).
    
    -Neil
    
    
    
  17. Re: Release cycle length

    Matthew T. O'Connor <matthew@zeut.net> — 2003-11-18T02:49:28Z

    Peter Eisentraut wrote:
    
    >Marc G. Fournier writes:
    >  
    >
    >>Right now, I believe we are looking at an April 1st beta, and a May 1st
    >>related ... those are, as always, *tentative* dates that will become more
    >>fine-tuned as those dates become nearer ...
    >>    
    >>
    >
    >OK, here start the problems.  Development already started, so April 1st is
    >already 5 months development.  Add 1 month because no one is willing to
    >hold people to these dates.  So that's 6 months.  Then for 6 months of
    >development, you need at least 2 months of beta.  So we're already in the
    >middle of July, everyone is on vacation, and we'll easily reach the 9
    >months -- instead of 6.
    >  
    >
    Do you think that 2 months for beta is realistic?  Tom announced feature 
    freeze on July 1.
    http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2003-07/msg00040.php
    
    So 7.4 took about 4.5 months to get from feature freeze to release.  I 
    think feature freeze is the important date that developers of new 
    features need to concern themselves with.
    
    I agree with Peter's other comment, that the longer the development 
    cycle, the longer the beta / bug shakeout period, perhaps a shorter dev 
    cycle would yield a shorter beta period, but perhaps it would also 
    result in a less solid release.
    
    
    
  18. Re: Release cycle length

    Marc G. Fournier <scrappy@postgresql.org> — 2003-11-18T03:00:01Z

    On Tue, 18 Nov 2003, Peter Eisentraut wrote:
    
    > Marc G. Fournier writes:
    >
    > > Right now, I believe we are looking at an April 1st beta, and a May 1st
    > > related ... those are, as always, *tentative* dates that will become more
    > > fine-tuned as those dates become nearer ...
    >
    > OK, here start the problems.  Development already started, so April 1st is
    > already 5 months development.  Add 1 month because no one is willing to
    > hold people to these dates.  So that's 6 months.  Then for 6 months of
    > development, you need at least 2 months of beta.  So we're already in the
    > middle of July, everyone is on vacation, and we'll easily reach the 9
    > months -- instead of 6.
    
    'K, Sept 1st it is then ... sounds reasonable to me :)
    
    
    
  19. Re: Release cycle length

    Neil Conway <neilc@samurai.com> — 2003-11-18T03:10:20Z

    "Matthew T. O'Connor" <matthew@zeut.net> writes:
    > So 7.4 took about 4.5 months to get from feature freeze to release.
    > I think feature freeze is the important date that developers of new
    > features need to concern themselves with.
    
    Rather than the length of the release cycle, I think it's the length
    of the beta cycle that we should focus on improving. IMHO, we should
    try to make the beta process more efficient: sometimes I get the
    impression that the beta process just drags on and on, without the
    extra time resulting in a huge improvement in the reliability of the
    .0 release (witness the fact that all the .0 releases I can remember
    have had a *lot* of serious bugs in them -- we can't catch everything
    of course, but I think there is definitely room for improvement).
    
    That said, I'm not really sure how we can make better use of the beta
    period. One obvious improvement would be making the beta announcements
    more visible: the obscurity of the beta process on www.postgresql.org
    for 7.4 was pretty ridiculous. Does anyone else have a suggestion on
    what we can do to produce a more reliable .0 release in less time?
    
    -Neil
    
    
    
  20. Re: Release cycle length

    Kevin Brown <kevin@sysexperts.com> — 2003-11-18T03:21:23Z

    Neil Conway wrote:
    > Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> writes:
    > > First, if you develop something today, the first time users would
    > > realistically get a hand at it would be January 2005.  Do you want
    > > that?  Don't you want people to use your code?
    > 
    > Sure :-) But I don't mind a long release cycle if it is better for
    > users.
    
    Given that users can run whatever they like, it's not clear that a long
    release cycle is better for users.
    
    >   (c) As PostgreSQL gets more mature, putting out stable,
    >       production-worthy releases becomes even more important. In
    >       theory, longer release cycles contribute to higher quality
    >       releases: we have more time to implement new features properly,
    >       polish rough edges and document things, test and find bugs, and
    >       ensure that features we've implemented earlier in the release
    >       cycle are properly thought out, and so forth.
    
    On the other hand, the longer you wait to release a new feature, the
    longer it will be before you get your REAL testing done.  You don't want
    to release something that hasn't at least been looked over and checked
    out by the development community first, of course, but waiting beyond that
    point to release a new version of PG doesn't help you that much, because
    most people aren't going to run the latest CVS version -- they'll run
    the latest released version, whatever that may be.  So the time between
    the testing phase for the feature you implement and the version release
    is essentially "dead time" for testing of that feature, because most
    developers have moved on to working on and/or testing something else.
    
    That's why the release methodology used by the Linux kernel development
    team is a reasonable one.  Because the development releases are still
    releases, people who wish to be more on the bleeding edge can do so
    without having to grab the source from CVS and compile it themselves.
    And package maintainers are more likely to package up the development
    version if it's given to them in a nice, prepackaged format, even if
    it's just a source tarball.
    
    >       Note that whether or not we are using those 355 days effectively
    >       is another story -- it may well be true that there are we could
    >       make parts of the development process much more efficient.
    > 
    > Furthermore, longer release cycles reduce, to some degree, the pain of
    > upgrades. Unless we make substantial improvements to the upgrade story
    > any time soon, I wouldn't be surprised if many DBAs are relieved at
    > only needing to upgrade once a year.
    
    But DBAs only "need" to upgrade as often as they feel like.  Any
    reasonable distribution will give them an option of using either the
    stable version or the development version anyway, if we're talking about
    prepackaged versions.
    
    > > The longer you develop, the more parallel efforts are underway, and
    > > it becomes impossible to synchronize them to a release date.
    > 
    > I think this is inherent to the way PostgreSQL is developed: Tom has
    > previously compared PostgreSQL release scheduling to herding cats :-)
    > As long as much of the work on the project is done by volunteers in
    > their spare time, ISTM that coordinating everyone toward a single
    > release date is going to be difficult, if not impossible. The length
    > of the release cycle doesn't really effect this, IMHO.
    
    Linux, too, is done largely by volunteers in their spare time.  Yet
    Linux kernel releases are much more frequent than PostgreSQL releases.
    One difference is that the Linux community makes a distinction between
    development releases and stable releases.  The amount of time between
    stable releases is probably about the same as it is for PostgreSQL.  The
    difference is that the *only* releases PostgreSQL makes are stable
    releases (or release candidates, when a stable release is close).
    That's something we might want to re-think.
    
    
    -- 
    Kevin Brown					      kevin@sysexperts.com
    
    
  21. Re: Release cycle length

    Kevin Brown <kevin@sysexperts.com> — 2003-11-18T03:26:20Z

    Matthew T. O'Connor wrote:
    > I agree with Peter's other comment, that the longer the development 
    > cycle, the longer the beta / bug shakeout period, perhaps a shorter dev 
    > cycle would yield a shorter beta period, but perhaps it would also 
    > result in a less solid release.
    
    Perhaps.  Perhaps not.  The fewer the changes, the less complexity you
    have to manage.
    
    But it would certainly result in a smaller set of feature changes per
    release.  Some people might regard that as a good thing.
    
    The advantage to doing more frequent releases is that new features end
    up with more real-world testing within a given block of time, on
    average, because a lot more people pick up the releases than the CVS
    snapshots or even release candidates..
    
    
    -- 
    Kevin Brown					      kevin@sysexperts.com
    
    
  22. Re: Release cycle length

    Christopher Kings-Lynne <chriskl@familyhealth.com.au> — 2003-11-18T03:32:25Z

    > That said, I'm not really sure how we can make better use of the beta
    > period. One obvious improvement would be making the beta announcements
    > more visible: the obscurity of the beta process on www.postgresql.org
    > for 7.4 was pretty ridiculous. Does anyone else have a suggestion on
    > what we can do to produce a more reliable .0 release in less time?
    
    I can think of a few things.
    
    1. Try to encourage list members to actually test stuff.  For example, I 
    decided to find stuff that might be broken.  So I checked the tutorial 
    scripts (no-one ever looks at them) and found heaps of bugs.  I thought 
    about some new features and tried to break them.  I also tend to find 
    bugs by coding phpPgAdmin and delving into the nitty gritty of stuff.
    
    Maybe we could actually ask for people for the 'beta team'.  Then, once 
    we have volunteers, they are each assigned a set of features to test by 
    the 'testing co-ordinator' (a new core position, say?)  What you are 
    asked to test depends on your skill, say.
    
    eg. Someone who just knows how to use postgres could test my upcoming 
    COMMENT ON patch.  (It's best if I myself do not test it)  Someone with 
    more skill with a debugger can be asked to test unique hash indexes by 
    playing with concurrency, etc.
    
    The test co-ordinator could also manage the testing of new features as 
    they are committed to save time later.
    
    The co-ordinator should also maintain a list of what features have been 
    committed, which have been code reviewed (what Tom usually does) and 
    which have been tested.
    
    Of course, I'm not talking about exhaustive testing here, just better 
    and more organised that what we currently have.
    
    Chris
    
    
    
    
  23. Re: Release cycle length

    Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> — 2003-11-18T03:43:12Z

    Neil Conway writes:
    
    > That said, I'm not really sure how we can make better use of the beta
    > period. One obvious improvement would be making the beta announcements
    > more visible: the obscurity of the beta process on www.postgresql.org
    > for 7.4 was pretty ridiculous. Does anyone else have a suggestion on
    > what we can do to produce a more reliable .0 release in less time?
    
    Here are a couple of ideas:
    
    0. As you say, make it known to the public.  Have people test their
       in-development applications using a beta.
    
    1. Start platform testing on day 1 of beta.  Last minute fixes for AIX or
       UnixWare are really becoming old jokes.
    
    2. Have a complete account of the changes available at the start of beta,
       so people know what to test.
    
    3. Use a bug-tracking system so that "open items" are known early and by
       everyone.
    
    4. Have a schedule.  Not "We're looking at a release early in the later
       part of this year.", but dates for steps such as feature freeze then,
       proposals for open issues fielded then, string freeze then,
       release candiate then.
    
    5. If need be, have a release management team that manages 0-4.
    
    -- 
    Peter Eisentraut   peter_e@gmx.net
    
    
    
  24. Re: [HACKERS] Release cycle length

    Marc G. Fournier <scrappy@postgresql.org> — 2003-11-18T03:46:46Z

    On Mon, 17 Nov 2003, Neil Conway wrote:
    
    > That said, I'm not really sure how we can make better use of the beta
    > period. One obvious improvement would be making the beta announcements
    > more visible: the obscurity of the beta process on www.postgresql.org
    > for 7.4 was pretty ridiculous. Does anyone else have a suggestion on
    > what we can do to produce a more reliable .0 release in less time?
    
    Agreed ... here's a thought ...
    
    take the download page and break it into two pages:
    
    page 1: broken down into "dev" vs "stable" versions, including the date of
    release ...
    
    page 2: when you click on the version you want to download, it brings you
    to a subpage that is what the main page currently is (with all the flags
    and such) but instead of just sending ppl to the ftp site itself, actually
    have the link go to the directory that contains that version on the mirror
    site ...
    
    that first page of the download could contain descriptoins of the variosu
    releases, and state of releases?
    
    
  25. Re: Release cycle length

    Christopher Kings-Lynne <chriskl@familyhealth.com.au> — 2003-11-18T03:58:59Z

    > eg. Someone who just knows how to use postgres could test my upcoming 
    > COMMENT ON patch.  (It's best if I myself do not test it)  Someone with 
    > more skill with a debugger can be asked to test unique hash indexes by 
    > playing with concurrency, etc.
    
    I forgot to mention that people who just have large, complex production 
    databases and test servers at their disposal should be given the task of:
    
    1. Dumping their old version database
    2. Loading that into the dev version of postgres
    3. Dumping that using dev pg_dump
    4. Loading that dump back in
    5. Dumping it again
    6. Diffing 3 and 5
    
    Chris
    
    
    
    
  26. Re: Release cycle length

    Larry Rosenman <ler@lerctr.org> — 2003-11-18T04:07:54Z

    
    --On Tuesday, November 18, 2003 04:43:12 +0100 Peter Eisentraut 
    <peter_e@gmx.net> wrote:
    
    > Neil Conway writes:
    >
    >> That said, I'm not really sure how we can make better use of the beta
    >> period. One obvious improvement would be making the beta announcements
    >> more visible: the obscurity of the beta process on www.postgresql.org
    >> for 7.4 was pretty ridiculous. Does anyone else have a suggestion on
    >> what we can do to produce a more reliable .0 release in less time?
    >
    > Here are a couple of ideas:
    >
    > 0. As you say, make it known to the public.  Have people test their
    >    in-development applications using a beta.
    >
    > 1. Start platform testing on day 1 of beta.  Last minute fixes for AIX or
    >    UnixWare are really becoming old jokes.
    The only reason we had last minute stuff for UnixWare this time was the 
    timing of PG's release and the UP3 release from SCO.
    
    
    I try to test stuff fairly frequently, and this time I didn't know when, 
    exactly, SCO would make the release of the updated compiler.
    
    LER
    
    -- 
    Larry Rosenman                     http://www.lerctr.org/~ler
    Phone: +1 972-414-9812                 E-Mail: ler@lerctr.org
    US Mail: 1905 Steamboat Springs Drive, Garland, TX 75044-6749
    
  27. Re: Release cycle length

    Marc G. Fournier <scrappy@postgresql.org> — 2003-11-18T04:36:11Z

    On Tue, 18 Nov 2003, Peter Eisentraut wrote:
    
    > 0. As you say, make it known to the public.  Have people test their
    >    in-development applications using a beta.
    
    and how do you propose we do that?  I think this is the hard part ...
    other then the first beta, I post a note out to -announce and -general
    that the beta's have been tag'd and bundled for download ... I know Sean
    does up a 'devel' port for FreeBSD, but I don't believe any of the RPM/deb
    maintainers do anything until the final release ...
    
    > 1. Start platform testing on day 1 of beta.  Last minute fixes for AIX
    > or UnixWare are really becoming old jokes.
    
    then each beta will have to be "re-certified" for that beta, up until
    release ... doable, but I don't think you'll find many that will bother
    until we are close to release ...
    
    > 2. Have a complete account of the changes available at the start of beta,
    >    so people know what to test.
    
    Bruce, when do you do your initial HISTORY file?  Something to move to the
    start of beta, if not?
    
    > 3. Use a bug-tracking system so that "open items" are known early and by
    >    everyone.
    
    Waiting to see anyone decide on which one to use ... willing to spend the
    time working to get it online ...
    
    > 4. Have a schedule.  Not "We're looking at a release early in the later
    >    part of this year.", but dates for steps such as feature freeze then,
    >    proposals for open issues fielded then, string freeze then,
    >    release candiate then.
    
    We try that every release ...
    
    > 5. If need be, have a release management team that manages 0-4.
    
    Core does that, but we just don't feel that being totally rigid is (or has
    ever been) a requirement ... but, if you can provide suggestions on points
    0 and 3, we're all ears ...
    
    
    
  28. Re: Release cycle length

    Marc G. Fournier <scrappy@postgresql.org> — 2003-11-18T04:36:48Z

    On Mon, 17 Nov 2003, Larry Rosenman wrote:
    
    >
    > I try to test stuff fairly frequently, and this time I didn't know when,
    > exactly, SCO would make the release of the updated compiler.
    
    And there was no way you could predict that your contact there would take
    off on holidays either :(
    
    
    
  29. Re: Release cycle length

    Neil Conway <neilc@samurai.com> — 2003-11-18T05:53:12Z

    "Marc G. Fournier" <scrappy@postgresql.org> writes:
    > On Tue, 18 Nov 2003, Peter Eisentraut wrote:
    >
    >> 0. As you say, make it known to the public.  Have people test their
    >>    in-development applications using a beta.
    >
    > and how do you propose we do that?  I think this is the hard part
    
    (1) Make the beta more obvious on the website, as we've already
        discussed
    
    (2) Make a freshmeat.net release announcement for _each_ beta, RC, and
        of course the final release (we totally missed this during 7.4).
        There are probably other software release announcement sites we
        could inform.
    
    (3) Is it worth trying to get some technical press coverage for the
        start of the beta process? I don't mean on PHB-oriented sites like
        ComputerWorld or ZdNet where we need to do the work of getting a
        press release prepared, but OSNews or Slashdot just need a link to
        the release notes and the source tarballs.
    
    Any other suggestions?
    
    Perhaps we could add a list of this sort to src/tools/RELEASE_CHANGES?
    
    -Neil
    
    
    
  30. Re: Release cycle length

    Marc G. Fournier <scrappy@postgresql.org> — 2003-11-18T06:00:56Z

    On Tue, 18 Nov 2003, Neil Conway wrote:
    
    > "Marc G. Fournier" <scrappy@postgresql.org> writes:
    > > On Tue, 18 Nov 2003, Peter Eisentraut wrote:
    > >
    > >> 0. As you say, make it known to the public.  Have people test their
    > >>    in-development applications using a beta.
    > >
    > > and how do you propose we do that?  I think this is the hard part
    >
    > (1) Make the beta more obvious on the website, as we've already
    >     discussed
    >
    > (2) Make a freshmeat.net release announcement for _each_ beta, RC, and
    >     of course the final release (we totally missed this during 7.4).
    >     There are probably other software release announcement sites we
    >     could inform.
    
    Damn, I keep forgetting freshmeat.net altogether ... will get that one
    during the day tomorrow ...
    
    > (3) Is it worth trying to get some technical press coverage for the
    >     start of the beta process? I don't mean on PHB-oriented sites like
    >     ComputerWorld or ZdNet where we need to do the work of getting a
    >     press release prepared, but OSNews or Slashdot just need a link to
    >     the release notes and the source tarballs.
    
    I think so ... just a heads up to tell ppl that we are heading into the
    final stretch for the next release, and testing would be 'a good thing'
    ...
    
    
    
    
  31. Re: Release cycle length

    elein <elein@varlena.com> — 2003-11-18T06:57:20Z

    On Tue, Nov 18, 2003 at 12:36:11AM -0400, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
    > On Tue, 18 Nov 2003, Peter Eisentraut wrote:
    > 
    > > 0. As you say, make it known to the public.  Have people test their
    > >    in-development applications using a beta.
    > 
    > and how do you propose we do that?  I think this is the hard part ...
    > other then the first beta, I post a note out to -announce and -general
    > that the beta's have been tag'd and bundled for download ... I know Sean
    > does up a 'devel' port for FreeBSD, but I don't believe any of the RPM/deb
    > maintainers do anything until the final release ...
    > 
    
    For what it is worth, I try to promote the beta testing on general bits.
    I also invite people to write articles for me.  To highlight a feature
    or concept or just to egg people on in a short article by a guest to 
    general bits is very appropriate.  My audience might not be core
    hackers, but getting the larger user group to participate as well
    as prepare for conversion is something I can help promote.  
    (Just contact me to submit articles for publication--the invitation
    is always open.)
    
    --elein
    
    =============================================================
    elein@varlena.com       Varlena, LLC          www.varlena.com
    
               PostgreSQL Consulting, Support & Training    
    
    PostgreSQL General Bits   http://www.varlena.com/GeneralBits/
    =============================================================
    I have always depended on the [QA] of strangers.
    
    
    
  32. Re: [HACKERS] Release cycle length

    Andreas Grabmller <webmaster@letzplay.de> — 2003-11-18T08:13:40Z

    ----- Original-Nachricht -----
    Von: "Marc G. Fournier" <scrappy@postgresql.org>
    An: Neil Conway <neilc@samurai.com>
    CC: pgsql-www@postgresql.org, PostgreSQL Development <pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org>
    Datum: Tuesday, November 18, 2003 05:06 AM
    Betreff: [pgsql-www] [HACKERS] Release cycle length
    
    > On Mon, 17 Nov 2003, Neil Conway wrote:
    > 
    > > That said, I'm not really sure how we can make better use of the beta
    > > period. One obvious improvement would be making the beta announcements
    > > more visible: the obscurity of the beta process on www.postgresql.org
    > > for 7.4 was pretty ridiculous. Does anyone else have a suggestion on
    > > what we can do to produce a more reliable .0 release in less time?
    > 
    > Agreed ... here's a thought ...
    > 
    > take the download page and break it into two pages:
    > 
    > page 1: broken down into "dev" vs "stable" versions, including the date of
    > release ...
    > 
    > page 2: when you click on the version you want to download, it brings you
    > to a subpage that is what the main page currently is (with all the flags
    > and such) but instead of just sending ppl to the ftp site itself, actually
    > have the link go to the directory that contains that version on the mirror
    > site ...
    > 
    > that first page of the download could contain descriptoins of the variosu
    > releases, and state of releases?
    > 
    > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)---------------------------
    > TIP 4: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster
    
    We could also use some download page similar to the one on httpd.apache.org - first you select a mirror (and one near you has been preselected) and under it you get a list of possible downloads... might be easier for the users than browsing through FTP...
    
    Mit freundlichen Grüßen
    Andreas Grabmüller
    
    --
    LetzPlay.de
    | Freemail:       http://www.letzplay.de/mail
    | Forenhosting: http://www.letzplay.de/foren
    >From pgsql-www-owner@postgresql.org  Tue Nov 18 04:15:07 2003
    X-Original-To: pgsql-www-postgresql.org@localhost.postgresql.org
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    Subject: Re: Page contents
    Date: Tue, 18 Nov 2003 08:14:27 -0000
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    X-MS-Has-Attach: 
    X-MS-TNEF-Correlator: 
    Thread-Topic: [pgsql-www] Page contents
    thread-index: AcOtbgM9SAgrXxi+Rp+lkoa8ImZAFwAPSIfA
    From: "Dave Page" <dpage@vale-housing.co.uk>
    To: "Bruce Momjian" <pgman@candle.pha.pa.us>
    Cc: "Justin Clift" <justin@postgresql.org>,
    	<pgsql-www@postgresql.org>,
    	"Marc G. Fournier" <scrappy@postgresql.org>
    X-Virus-Scanned: by amavisd-new at postgresql.org
    X-Archive-Number: 200311/310
    X-Sequence-Number: 2957
    
    =20
    
    > -----Original Message-----
    > From: Bruce Momjian [mailto:pgman@candle.pha.pa.us]=20
    > Sent: 18 November 2003 00:51
    > To: Dave Page
    > Cc: Justin Clift; pgsql-www@postgresql.org; Marc G. Fournier
    > Subject: Re: [pgsql-www] Page contents
    >=20
    > Dave Page wrote:
    > >=20=20
    > >=20
    > > > -----Original Message-----
    > > > From: Bruce Momjian [mailto:pgman@candle.pha.pa.us]
    > > > Sent: 17 November 2003 00:34
    > > > To: Dave Page
    > > > Cc: Justin Clift; pgsql-www@postgresql.org; Marc G. Fournier
    > > > Subject: Re: [pgsql-www] Page contents
    > > >=20
    > > > Should opening an email every give you a virus?  I don't think so.
    > > >=20
    > >=20
    > > No, but my point is without proper protection/procedures a=20
    > user of any=20
    > > OS/MUA can open and execute a trojan.
    >=20
    > Right, but I think my MUA and helper applications are=20
    > designed to be safe so I can't botch it up.
    
    As have been the last few versions of Outlook (proper, dunno about
    Express). To get round that protection you have to do some non-trivial
    registry hacking and even then you still get warnings when you try to
    open things.
    
    Whilst there are undoubtedly vulnerabilities in Outlook, as most other
    apps, I think it's unfair to blame a product just because it has a
    better class of idiot in it's userbase - especially when it's their
    actions that cause 99.9% of the problems.
    
    Anyhoo, this is waaaaay off-topic for here. I'm not overly interested,
    but if anyone feels compelled to keep discussing this, feel free to
    email me off-list :-)
    
    Regards, Dave.
    
    
  33. Re: Release cycle length

    Oliver Elphick <olly@lfix.co.uk> — 2003-11-18T10:02:15Z

    On Tue, 2003-11-18 at 04:36, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
    > On Tue, 18 Nov 2003, Peter Eisentraut wrote:
    > 
    > > 0. As you say, make it known to the public.  Have people test their
    > >    in-development applications using a beta.
    > 
    > and how do you propose we do that?  I think this is the hard part ...
    > other then the first beta, I post a note out to -announce and -general
    > that the beta's have been tag'd and bundled for download ... I know Sean
    > does up a 'devel' port for FreeBSD, but I don't believe any of the RPM/deb
    > maintainers do anything until the final release ...
    
    I do in fact build debs of the beta and rc releases.  These have gone
    into the experimental archive in Debian and are announced on Debian
    lists.  I even posted an announcement to pgsql-general, on 10th October
    for example.
    
    -- 
    Oliver Elphick                                Oliver.Elphick@lfix.co.uk
    Isle of Wight, UK                             http://www.lfix.co.uk/oliver
    GPG: 1024D/3E1D0C1C: CA12 09E0 E8D5 8870 5839  932A 614D 4C34 3E1D 0C1C
                     ========================================
         "A Song for the sabbath day. It is a good thing to 
          give thanks unto the LORD, and to sing praises unto 
          thy name, O most High."   Psalms 92:1 
    
    
    
  34. Re: Release cycle length

    Sean Chittenden <sean@chittenden.org> — 2003-11-18T10:41:01Z

    > > 0. As you say, make it known to the public.  Have people test
    > > their in-development applications using a beta.
    > 
    > and how do you propose we do that?  I think this is the hard part
    > ...  other then the first beta, I post a note out to -announce and
    > -general that the beta's have been tag'd and bundled for download
    > ... I know Sean does up a 'devel' port for FreeBSD, but I don't
    > believe any of the RPM/deb maintainers do anything until the final
    > release ...
    
    Incidentally, the reason that I created the -devel port is because I
    needed some of the features now and didn't want to wait for a release.
    As things stand, I'm getting roughly 50-100 downloads a day of my
    -devel snapshots, which leads me to believe that there is some
    interest in having the release engineering team push features out the
    door more quickly.  My eye on the pgsql repo isn't perfect, but I know
    I'm not the only one using it in production.
    
    > > 5. If need be, have a release management team that manages 0-4.
    > 
    > Core does that, but we just don't feel that being totally rigid is
    > (or has ever been) a requirement ... but, if you can provide
    > suggestions on points 0 and 3, we're all ears ...
    
    You've got FreeBSD blood in you, you know that core@pgsql is the same
    as trb@FreeBSD + core@FreeBSD + re@FreeBSD + qa@FreeBSD.  I think that
    core@pgsql's big reason for wanting to have long release cycles is to
    minimize the time that pgsql developers spend with their re@ and qa@
    hats on.  Truth be told, pgsql's code quality in the tree is so high
    that a snapshot of HEAD is almost as good as a release... the
    difference being the amount of attention spent on detail, docs,
    finishing touches/polish.  For the # of lines of code that go into
    pgsql, it's nearly bug free over 95% of the time which means to me
    with an releng hat on, that pgsql could stand to increase the rate of
    releases so long as the developers can stomach doing the extra merges
    from HEAD to the stable branch for feature additions or possibly
    watching micro version numbers increment faster than they have
    historically.
    
    For all intents and purposes, pgsql's releases are stellar and the Pg
    team makes every release very important to most everyone, where
    important is defined as containing features useful for everyone: as
    opposed to a re@ release often model where releases don't necessarily
    useful features to a majority and just lead to upgrade thrashing which
    is costly to organizations.  Food for thought... nothing conclusive
    here.  -sc
    
    -- 
    Sean Chittenden
    
    
  35. Re: [HACKERS] Release cycle length

    Michael Glaesemann <grzm@myrealbox.com> — 2003-11-18T12:30:06Z

    On Tuesday, November 18, 2003, at 05:13 PM, Andreas Grabmüller wrote:
    
    > ----- Original-Nachricht -----
    > Von: "Marc G. Fournier" <scrappy@postgresql.org>
    > An: Neil Conway <neilc@samurai.com>
    > CC: pgsql-www@postgresql.org, PostgreSQL Development 
    > <pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org>
    > Datum: Tuesday, November 18, 2003 05:06 AM
    > Betreff: [pgsql-www] [HACKERS] Release cycle length
    >
    >> On Mon, 17 Nov 2003, Neil Conway wrote:
    >>
    >>> That said, I'm not really sure how we can make better use of the beta
    >>> period. One obvious improvement would be making the beta 
    >>> announcements
    >>> more visible: the obscurity of the beta process on www.postgresql.org
    >>> for 7.4 was pretty ridiculous. Does anyone else have a suggestion on
    >>> what we can do to produce a more reliable .0 release in less time?
    >>
    >> Agreed ... here's a thought ...
    >>
    >> take the download page and break it into two pages:
    >>
    >> page 1: broken down into "dev" vs "stable" versions, including the 
    >> date of
    >> release ...
    >>
    >> page 2: when you click on the version you want to download, it brings 
    >> you
    >> to a subpage that is what the main page currently is (with all the 
    >> flags
    >> and such) but instead of just sending ppl to the ftp site itself, 
    >> actually
    >> have the link go to the directory that contains that version on the 
    >> mirror
    >> site ...
    >>
    >> that first page of the download could contain descriptoins of the 
    >> variosu
    >> releases, and state of releases?
    >>
    >> ---------------------------(end of 
    >> broadcast)---------------------------
    >> TIP 4: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster
    >
    > We could also use some download page similar to the one on 
    > httpd.apache.org - first you select a mirror (and one near you has 
    > been preselected) and under it you get a list of possible downloads... 
    > might be easier for the users than browsing through FTP...
    
     From a users' standpoint, do you think the users are looking for a 
    mirror or for software? Maybe put the download first, then a selection 
    of mirrors. I haven't done a lot of downloading, so my perspective 
    might be a little off. And advantage of the mirror > download order 
    would be if people are downloading more than one item at a time. Then 
    they wouldn't have to go back to choose another download. However, once 
    they choose the mirror (and commence the download) a page could come up 
    offering the option to download more from this mirror.
    
    Just some thoughts.
    Michael
    
    
    
  36. Re: Release cycle length

    Bruno Wolff III <bruno@wolff.to> — 2003-11-18T13:18:27Z

    On Mon, Nov 17, 2003 at 20:08:41 -0500,
      Neil Conway <neilc@samurai.com> wrote:
    > Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> writes:
    > > The time from release 7.3 to release 7.4 was 355 days, an all-time
    > > high.  We really need to shorten that.
    > 
    > Why is that?
    
    End users will find it useful.
    
    I started using 7.4 from CVS early on because check constraints for domains
    were available.
    
    With a long release cycle you have to wait a long time to get any of
    the features in a release when some of them may have been developed
    early in the release cycle.
    
    
  37. Re: [HACKERS] Release cycle length

    Andreas Grabmller <webmaster@letzplay.de> — 2003-11-18T13:32:01Z

    ----- Original-Nachricht -----
    Von: "Michael Glaesemann" <grzm@myrealbox.com>
    An:  <webmaster@letzplay.de>
    CC: neilc@samurai.com, scrappy@postgresql.org, pgsql-www@postgresql.org
    Datum: Tuesday, November 18, 2003 01:32 PM
    Betreff: [pgsql-www] [HACKERS] Release cycle length
    
    > On Tuesday, November 18, 2003, at 05:13 PM, Andreas Grabmüller wrote:
    > 
    > > ----- Original-Nachricht -----
    > > Von: "Marc G. Fournier" <scrappy@postgresql.org>
    > > An: Neil Conway <neilc@samurai.com>
    > > CC: pgsql-www@postgresql.org, PostgreSQL Development 
    > > <pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org>
    > > Datum: Tuesday, November 18, 2003 05:06 AM
    > > Betreff: [pgsql-www] [HACKERS] Release cycle length
    > >
    > >> On Mon, 17 Nov 2003, Neil Conway wrote:
    > >>
    > >>> That said, I'm not really sure how we can make better use of the beta
    > >>> period. One obvious improvement would be making the beta 
    > >>> announcements
    > >>> more visible: the obscurity of the beta process on www.postgresql.org
    > >>> for 7.4 was pretty ridiculous. Does anyone else have a suggestion on
    > >>> what we can do to produce a more reliable .0 release in less time?
    > >>
    > >> Agreed ... here's a thought ...
    > >>
    > >> take the download page and break it into two pages:
    > >>
    > >> page 1: broken down into "dev" vs "stable" versions, including the 
    > >> date of
    > >> release ...
    > >>
    > >> page 2: when you click on the version you want to download, it brings 
    > >> you
    > >> to a subpage that is what the main page currently is (with all the 
    > >> flags
    > >> and such) but instead of just sending ppl to the ftp site itself, 
    > >> actually
    > >> have the link go to the directory that contains that version on the 
    > >> mirror
    > >> site ...
    > >>
    > >> that first page of the download could contain descriptoins of the 
    > >> variosu
    > >> releases, and state of releases?
    > >>
    > >> ---------------------------(end of 
    > >> broadcast)---------------------------
    > >> TIP 4: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster
    > >
    > > We could also use some download page similar to the one on 
    > > httpd.apache.org - first you select a mirror (and one near you has 
    > > been preselected) and under it you get a list of possible downloads... 
    > > might be easier for the users than browsing through FTP...
    > 
    >  From a users' standpoint, do you think the users are looking for a 
    > mirror or for software? Maybe put the download first, then a selection 
    > of mirrors. I haven't done a lot of downloading, so my perspective 
    > might be a little off. And advantage of the mirror > download order 
    > would be if people are downloading more than one item at a time. Then 
    > they wouldn't have to go back to choose another download. However, once 
    > they choose the mirror (and commence the download) a page could come up 
    > offering the option to download more from this mirror.
    > 
    > Just some thoughts.
    > Michael
    
    Have you looked at the apache download site? I think it's goot (of course, we can put the mirror chooser under the download links - it doesn't matter for the functionality as always a different (random?) server gets preselected automatically...
    
    Mit freundlichen Grüßen
    Andreas Grabmüller
    
    --
    LetzPlay.de
    | Freemail:       http://www.letzplay.de/mail
    | Forenhosting: http://www.letzplay.de/foren
    >From pgsql-www-owner@postgresql.org  Tue Nov 18 09:48:16 2003
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    Date: Tue, 18 Nov 2003 22:47:24 +0900
    Subject: Re: [HACKERS] Release cycle length
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    On Tuesday, November 18, 2003, at 10:32 PM, Andreas Grabm=FCller wrote:
    > Have you looked at the apache download site? I think it's goot (of=20
    > course, we can put the mirror chooser under the download links - it=20
    > doesn't matter for the functionality as always a different (random?)=20
    > server gets preselected automatically...
    
    Yes, I did. I thought it was pretty good. Nice and clean. And I like=20
    how it chooses a server. I don't know how it selects. You could do it=20
    by location (nearness to the client ip), server load (weight those with=20
    lower server load). I'm sure there are other ways as well.
    
    I have seen examples where you choose the download, then the server. I=20
    wish I can think of one right now...
    
    Michael
    
    
  38. Re: Release cycle length

    Tommi Maekitalo <t.maekitalo@epgmbh.de> — 2003-11-18T13:33:41Z

    ...
    >
    > Does anyone have a comparison of how many lines of code were added in
    > this release compared to previous?
    >
    7.2.4: 456204 lines of code in 1021 files
    7.3.4: 480491 lines of code in 1012 files
    7.4: 554567 lines of code in 1128 files (boah!)
    
    I used a fresh extracted source-directory and executed 'find postgresql-7.xxx 
    -name '*.c' - o -name '*.h'|wc -l' and 'find postgresql-7.xxx -name '*.c' - o 
    -name '*.h'|xargs cat|wc -l'
    
    Tommi
    
    > Chris
    >
    >
    >
    > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)---------------------------
    > TIP 4: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster
    
    -- 
    Dr. Eckhardt + Partner GmbH
    http://www.epgmbh.de
    
    
    
  39. Re: Release cycle length

    Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@dcc.uchile.cl> — 2003-11-18T13:44:54Z

    On Tue, Nov 18, 2003 at 02:33:41PM +0100, Tommi Maekitalo wrote:
    > ...
    > >
    > > Does anyone have a comparison of how many lines of code were added in
    > > this release compared to previous?
    > >
    > 7.2.4: 456204 lines of code in 1021 files
    > 7.3.4: 480491 lines of code in 1012 files
    > 7.4: 554567 lines of code in 1128 files (boah!)
    
    I used SLOCcount by David A. Wheeler at some point on various releases
    (including 7.1.3 IIRC) and at some point the number of lines actually
    _decreased_.  I didn't look into it in more detail, but I think the
    number of lines of code doesn't even come near to telling the whole
    story.
    
    -- 
    Alvaro Herrera (<alvherre[a]dcc.uchile.cl>)
    You liked Linux a lot when he was just the gawky kid from down the block
    mowing your lawn or shoveling the snow. But now that he wants to date
    your daughter, you're not so sure he measures up. (Larry Greenemeier)
    
    
  40. Re: Release cycle length

    Bruce Momjian <pgman@candle.pha.pa.us> — 2003-11-18T14:51:03Z

    Marc G. Fournier wrote:
    > On Tue, 18 Nov 2003, Peter Eisentraut wrote:
    > 
    > > 0. As you say, make it known to the public.  Have people test their
    > >    in-development applications using a beta.
    > 
    > and how do you propose we do that?  I think this is the hard part ...
    > other then the first beta, I post a note out to -announce and -general
    > that the beta's have been tag'd and bundled for download ... I know Sean
    > does up a 'devel' port for FreeBSD, but I don't believe any of the RPM/deb
    > maintainers do anything until the final release ...
    > 
    > > 1. Start platform testing on day 1 of beta.  Last minute fixes for AIX
    > > or UnixWare are really becoming old jokes.
    > 
    > then each beta will have to be "re-certified" for that beta, up until
    > release ... doable, but I don't think you'll find many that will bother
    > until we are close to release ...
    > 
    > > 2. Have a complete account of the changes available at the start of beta,
    > >    so people know what to test.
    > 
    > Bruce, when do you do your initial HISTORY file?  Something to move to the
    > start of beta, if not?
    
    I see beta starting on:
    
    	revision 1.277
    	date: 2003/08/04 22:30:30;  author: pgsql;  state: Exp;  lines: +3 -3
    	
    	change tag to 7.4beta1 and update the Copyright to 2003
    	
    	Guess what folks?  We are now in Beta!!
    
    and 7.4 HISTORY updated on:
    
    	revision 1.196
    	date: 2003/08/03 23:26:05;  author: momjian;  state: Exp;  lines: +324 -26
    	Update HISTORY file for 7.4.
    
    so the HISTORY file was updated the day before beta started.  I haven't
    always been good about this, but I am now.
    
    -- 
      Bruce Momjian                        |  http://candle.pha.pa.us
      pgman@candle.pha.pa.us               |  (610) 359-1001
      +  If your life is a hard drive,     |  13 Roberts Road
      +  Christ can be your backup.        |  Newtown Square, Pennsylvania 19073
    
    
  41. Re: [HACKERS] Release cycle length

    Josh Berkus <josh@agliodbs.com> — 2003-11-18T17:42:31Z

    Guys,
    
    I agree with Neil ... it's not the length of the development part of the 
    cycle, it's the length of the beta testing.
    
    I do think an online bug tracker (bugzilla or whatever) would help.   I also 
    think that having a person in charge of "testing" would help as well ... no 
    biggie, just someone whose duty it is to e-mail people in the community and 
    ask about the results of testing, especially on the more obscure ports.  I 
    think a few e-mail reminders would do a *lot* to speed things up.  But I'm 
    not volunteering for this job; managing the release PR is "herding cats" 
    enough!
    
    I also contributed to the delays on this release because it took longer than I 
    expected to get the "PR machinery" started.   We have a sort of system now, 
    though, and the next release should be easier.
    
    HOWEVER, a release cycle of *less than 6 months* would kill the advocacy vols 
    if we wanted the same level of publicity.
    
    I do support the idea of "dev" releases.   For example, if there was a "dev" 
    release of PG+ARC as soon as Jan is done with it, I have one client would 
    would be willing to test it against a simulated production load on pretty 
    heavy-duty hardware.  
    
    (Oddly enough, my problem in doing more testing myself is external to 
    PostgreSQL; most of our apps are PHP apps and you can't compile PHP against 
    two different versions of PostgreSQL on the same server.   Maybe with User 
    Mode Linux I'll be able to do more testing now.)
    
    -- 
    Josh Berkus
    Aglio Database Solutions
    San Francisco
    
    
  42. Re: [pgsql-www] Release cycle length

    Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@dcc.uchile.cl> — 2003-11-18T18:17:50Z

    On Tue, Nov 18, 2003 at 09:42:31AM -0800, Josh Berkus wrote:
    
    > (Oddly enough, my problem in doing more testing myself is external to 
    > PostgreSQL; most of our apps are PHP apps and you can't compile PHP against 
    > two different versions of PostgreSQL on the same server.   Maybe with User 
    > Mode Linux I'll be able to do more testing now.)
    
    I'm not sure UML would help you here.  I think you'd be better trying to
    run Apache in a chrooted environment, PHP and PostgreSQL included.  You
    don't need another kernel, but another set of libraries.
    
    BTW, I think UMLSIM (umlsim.sf.net) could help to play the
    "unplug-the-server" game.  In theory you could rewrite the block
    subsystem to "fail", simulating a real disk failure and possible a
    system shutdown.  I don't have time to do it myself right now however ...
    
    -- 
    Alvaro Herrera (<alvherre[a]dcc.uchile.cl>)
    "Find a bug in a program, and fix it, and the program will work today.
    Show the program how to find and fix a bug, and the program
    will work forever" (Oliver Silfridge)
    
    
  43. Re: [pgsql-www] Release cycle length

    Andrew Dunstan <andrew@dunslane.net> — 2003-11-18T18:48:57Z

    Josh Berkus wrote:
    
    >Guys,
    >
    >I agree with Neil ... it's not the length of the development part of the 
    >cycle, it's the length of the beta testing.
    >
    >I do think an online bug tracker (bugzilla or whatever) would help.   I also 
    >think that having a person in charge of "testing" would help as well ... no 
    >biggie, just someone whose duty it is to e-mail people in the community and 
    >ask about the results of testing, especially on the more obscure ports.  I 
    >think a few e-mail reminders would do a *lot* to speed things up.  But I'm 
    >not volunteering for this job; managing the release PR is "herding cats" 
    >enough!
    >
    
    Maybe some sort of automated distributed build farm would be a good 
    idea. Check out http://build.samba.org/about.html to see how samba does 
    it (much lighter than the Mozilla tinderbox approach).
    
    We wouldn't need to be as intensive as they appear to be - maybe a once 
    or twice a day download and test run would do the trick, but it could 
    pick up lots of breakage fairly quickly.
    
    That is not to say that more intensive testing isn't also needed on 
    occasion.
    
    cheers
    
    andrew
    
    
    
  44. Re: [pgsql-www] Release cycle length

    Marc G. Fournier <scrappy@postgresql.org> — 2003-11-18T19:13:52Z

    On Tue, 18 Nov 2003, Andrew Dunstan wrote:
    
    > Josh Berkus wrote:
    >
    > >Guys,
    > >
    > >I agree with Neil ... it's not the length of the development part of the
    > >cycle, it's the length of the beta testing.
    > >
    > >I do think an online bug tracker (bugzilla or whatever) would help.   I also
    > >think that having a person in charge of "testing" would help as well ... no
    > >biggie, just someone whose duty it is to e-mail people in the community and
    > >ask about the results of testing, especially on the more obscure ports.  I
    > >think a few e-mail reminders would do a *lot* to speed things up.  But I'm
    > >not volunteering for this job; managing the release PR is "herding cats"
    > >enough!
    > >
    >
    > Maybe some sort of automated distributed build farm would be a good
    > idea. Check out http://build.samba.org/about.html to see how samba does
    > it (much lighter than the Mozilla tinderbox approach).
    >
    > We wouldn't need to be as intensive as they appear to be - maybe a once
    > or twice a day download and test run would do the trick, but it could
    > pick up lots of breakage fairly quickly.
    >
    > That is not to say that more intensive testing isn't also needed on
    > occasion.
    
    Check the archives on this, as its been hashed out already once at least
    ... I think the big issue/problem is that nobody seems able (or wants) to
    come up with a script that could be setup in cron on machines to do this
    ... something simple that would dump the output to a log file and, if
    regression tests failed, email'd the machine owner that it needs to be
    checked would do, I would think ...
    
    
  45. Build farm

    Andrew Dunstan <andrew@dunslane.net> — 2003-11-18T19:36:23Z

    Marc G. Fournier wrote:
    
    >On Tue, 18 Nov 2003, Andrew Dunstan wrote:
    >
    >  
    >
    >>Maybe some sort of automated distributed build farm would be a good
    >>idea. Check out http://build.samba.org/about.html to see how samba does
    >>it (much lighter than the Mozilla tinderbox approach).
    >>
    >>We wouldn't need to be as intensive as they appear to be - maybe a once
    >>or twice a day download and test run would do the trick, but it could
    >>pick up lots of breakage fairly quickly.
    >>
    >>That is not to say that more intensive testing isn't also needed on
    >>occasion.
    >>    
    >>
    >
    >Check the archives on this, as its been hashed out already once at least
    >... I think the big issue/problem is that nobody seems able (or wants) to
    >come up with a script that could be setup in cron on machines to do this
    >... something simple that would dump the output to a log file and, if
    >regression tests failed, email'd the machine owner that it needs to be
    >checked would do, I would think ...
    >
    
    If there's general interest I'll try to cook something up. (This kind of stuff is right up my alley). I'd prefer some automated display of results, though. A simple CGI script should be all that's required for that.
    
    cheers
    
    andrew
    
    
    
    
    
  46. Re: Build farm

    Robert Treat <xzilla@users.sourceforge.net> — 2003-11-18T22:12:26Z

    On Tue, 2003-11-18 at 14:36, Andrew Dunstan wrote:
    > Marc G. Fournier wrote:
    > 
    > >On Tue, 18 Nov 2003, Andrew Dunstan wrote:
    > >
    > >  
    > >
    > >>Maybe some sort of automated distributed build farm would be a good
    > >>idea. Check out http://build.samba.org/about.html to see how samba does
    > >>it (much lighter than the Mozilla tinderbox approach).
    > >>
    > >>We wouldn't need to be as intensive as they appear to be - maybe a once
    > >>or twice a day download and test run would do the trick, but it could
    > >>pick up lots of breakage fairly quickly.
    > >>
    > >>That is not to say that more intensive testing isn't also needed on
    > >>occasion.
    > >>    
    > >>
    > >
    > >Check the archives on this, as its been hashed out already once at least
    > >... I think the big issue/problem is that nobody seems able (or wants) to
    > >come up with a script that could be setup in cron on machines to do this
    > >... something simple that would dump the output to a log file and, if
    > >regression tests failed, email'd the machine owner that it needs to be
    > >checked would do, I would think ...
    > >
    > 
    > If there's general interest I'll try to cook something up. (This kind of stuff is right up my alley). I'd prefer some automated display of results, though. A simple CGI script should be all that's required for that.
    > 
    
    look in the tools directory of cvs, i swear Bruce checked in a script he
    uses for similar tasks..
    
    Robert Treat
    -- 
    Build A Brighter Lamp :: Linux Apache {middleware} PostgreSQL
    
    
    
  47. Re: Build farm

    Bruce Momjian <pgman@candle.pha.pa.us> — 2003-11-19T01:09:53Z

    Robert Treat wrote:
    > > >Check the archives on this, as its been hashed out already once at least
    > > >... I think the big issue/problem is that nobody seems able (or wants) to
    > > >come up with a script that could be setup in cron on machines to do this
    > > >... something simple that would dump the output to a log file and, if
    > > >regression tests failed, email'd the machine owner that it needs to be
    > > >checked would do, I would think ...
    > > >
    > > 
    > > If there's general interest I'll try to cook something up. (This kind of stuff is right up my alley). I'd prefer some automated display of results, though. A simple CGI script should be all that's required for that.
    > > 
    > 
    > look in the tools directory of cvs, i swear Bruce checked in a script he
    > uses for similar tasks..
    
    /tools/pgtest
    
    -- 
      Bruce Momjian                        |  http://candle.pha.pa.us
      pgman@candle.pha.pa.us               |  (610) 359-1001
      +  If your life is a hard drive,     |  13 Roberts Road
      +  Christ can be your backup.        |  Newtown Square, Pennsylvania 19073
    
    
  48. Re: [HACKERS] Release cycle length

    Marc G. Fournier <scrappy@postgresql.org> — 2003-11-19T01:56:48Z

    On Wed, 19 Nov 2003, Christopher Kings-Lynne wrote:
    
    > > HOWEVER, a release cycle of *less than 6 months* would kill the advocacy vols
    > > if we wanted the same level of publicity.
    > >
    > > I do support the idea of "dev" releases.   For example, if there was a "dev"
    > > release of PG+ARC as soon as Jan is done with it, I have one client would
    > > would be willing to test it against a simulated production load on pretty
    > > heavy-duty hardware.
    >
    > Can't we have nightly builds always available?  Why can't they just use
    > the CVS version?
    
    We do do nightly builds ... have for years now ...
    
    ----
    Marc G. Fournier           Hub.Org Networking Services (http://www.hub.org)
    Email: scrappy@hub.org           Yahoo!: yscrappy              ICQ: 7615664
    
    
  49. Re: [HACKERS] Release cycle length

    Christopher Kings-Lynne <chriskl@familyhealth.com.au> — 2003-11-19T01:56:55Z

    > HOWEVER, a release cycle of *less than 6 months* would kill the advocacy vols 
    > if we wanted the same level of publicity.
    > 
    > I do support the idea of "dev" releases.   For example, if there was a "dev" 
    > release of PG+ARC as soon as Jan is done with it, I have one client would 
    > would be willing to test it against a simulated production load on pretty 
    > heavy-duty hardware.  
    
    Can't we have nightly builds always available?  Why can't they just use 
    the CVS version?
    
    > (Oddly enough, my problem in doing more testing myself is external to 
    > PostgreSQL; most of our apps are PHP apps and you can't compile PHP against 
    > two different versions of PostgreSQL on the same server.   Maybe with User 
    > Mode Linux I'll be able to do more testing now.)
    
    I'd be willing to give testing coordination a go, not sure where I'd 
    begin though.
    
    Chris
    
    
    
  50. Re: Build farm

    Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> — 2003-11-19T09:11:55Z

    Andrew Dunstan writes:
    
    > If there's general interest I'll try to cook something up. (This kind of
    > stuff is right up my alley). I'd prefer some automated display of
    > results, though. A simple CGI script should be all that's required for
    > that.
    
    The real problem will be to find enough machines so that the build farm
    becomes useful.  IMO, that would mean *more* machines than are currently
    lines in the supported-platforms table.
    
    -- 
    Peter Eisentraut   peter_e@gmx.net
    
    
    
  51. Re: Build farm

    Andrew Dunstan <andrew@dunslane.net> — 2003-11-19T12:59:54Z

    
    Peter Eisentraut wrote:
    
    >Andrew Dunstan writes:
    >
    >  
    >
    >>If there's general interest I'll try to cook something up. (This kind of
    >>stuff is right up my alley). I'd prefer some automated display of
    >>results, though. A simple CGI script should be all that's required for
    >>that.
    >>    
    >>
    >
    >The real problem will be to find enough machines so that the build farm
    >becomes useful.  IMO, that would mean *more* machines than are currently
    >lines in the supported-platforms table.
    >  
    >
    
    
    "Useful" is probably subjective. That list would at least be a good 
    place to start, though. What combinations of variables do you think we 
    would need?
    
    This would be a fairly painless way for users to be helpful to the 
    project, btw - the way I am envisioning things this would be fairly much 
    a "set and forget" process.
    
    I'll have an example page available in a few days.
    
    cheers
    
    andrew
    
    
    
  52. Re: Release cycle length

    Jan Wieck <janwieck@yahoo.com> — 2003-11-19T14:33:04Z

    Marc G. Fournier wrote:
    
    > On Tue, 18 Nov 2003, Peter Eisentraut wrote:
    > 
    >> The time from release 7.3 to release 7.4 was 355 days, an all-time high.
    >> We really need to shorten that.  We already have a number of significant
    >> improvements in 7.5 now, and several good ones coming up in the next few
    >> weeks.  We cannot let people wait 1 year for that.  I suggest that we aim
    >> for a 6 month cycle, consisting of approximately 4 months of development
    >> and 2 months of cleanup.  So the start of the next beta could be the 1st
    >> of March.  What do you think?
    > 
    > That is the usual goal *nod*  Same goal we try for each release, and never
    > quite seem to get there ... we'll try 'yet again' with v7.5 though, as we
    > always do :)
    
    I don't see much of a point for a shorter release cycle as long as we 
    don't get rid of the initdb requirement for releases that don't change 
    the system catalog structure. All we gain from that is spreading out the 
    number of different versions used in production.
    
    
    Jan
    
    -- 
    #======================================================================#
    # It's easier to get forgiveness for being wrong than for being right. #
    # Let's break this rule - forgive me.                                  #
    #================================================== JanWieck@Yahoo.com #
    
    
    
  53. Re: Build farm

    Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> — 2003-11-19T15:34:27Z

    Andrew Dunstan writes:
    
    > "Useful" is probably subjective. That list would at least be a good
    > place to start, though. What combinations of variables do you think we
    > would need?
    
    First of all, I don't necessarily think that a large list of CPU/operation
    system combinations is going to help much.  IIRC, this round of platform
    testing showed us two real problems, and both happened because the
    operating system version in question came out the previous day, so we
    could not have caught it.  Much more problems arise when people use
    different versions of secondary packages, such as Tcl, Perl, Kerberos,
    Flex, Bison.  So you would need to compile a large collection of these
    things.  The problem again is that it is usually the brand-new or the odd
    intermediate version of such a tool that breaks things, so a "set and
    forget" build farm is not going to catch it.  Another real source of
    problems are real systems.  Weird combinations of packages, weird network
    setups, weird applications, custom kernels.  These cannot be detected on
    out of the box setups.  In fact, the regression tests might not detect
    them at all.
    
    Hence the open-source community approach.  Closed-source development teams
    can do all the above, with great effort.  But by throwing out the code and
    have real people test them on real systems with real applications, you can
    do much better.
    
    -- 
    Peter Eisentraut   peter_e@gmx.net
    
    
    
  54. Re: Build farm

    Andrew Dunstan <andrew@dunslane.net> — 2003-11-19T17:18:00Z

    Peter Eisentraut wrote:
    
    >Andrew Dunstan writes:
    >
    >  
    >
    >>"Useful" is probably subjective. That list would at least be a good
    >>place to start, though. What combinations of variables do you think we
    >>would need?
    >>    
    >>
    >
    >First of all, I don't necessarily think that a large list of CPU/operation
    >system combinations is going to help much.  IIRC, this round of platform
    >testing showed us two real problems, and both happened because the
    >operating system version in question came out the previous day, so we
    >could not have caught it.  Much more problems arise when people use
    >different versions of secondary packages, such as Tcl, Perl, Kerberos,
    >Flex, Bison.  So you would need to compile a large collection of these
    >things.  The problem again is that it is usually the brand-new or the odd
    >intermediate version of such a tool that breaks things, so a "set and
    >forget" build farm is not going to catch it.  Another real source of
    >problems are real systems.  Weird combinations of packages, weird network
    >setups, weird applications, custom kernels.  These cannot be detected on
    >out of the box setups.  In fact, the regression tests might not detect
    >them at all.
    >
    >Hence the open-source community approach.  Closed-source development teams
    >can do all the above, with great effort.  But by throwing out the code and
    >have real people test them on real systems with real applications, you can
    >do much better.
    >
    >  
    >
    
    The fact that something doesn't find everything doesn't mean it is of no 
    value. (Thinks of Scott Adams' nice example: "Your theory of gravity 
    doesn't prove why there are no unicorns, so it is wrong." ;-) )
    
    I don't believe there is a single "open source community" approach - 
    open source projects all have differing ways of handling problems. At 
    least 2 very significant open source projects I know of run build farms, 
    notwithstanding that your objections should apply equally to them. 
    Mozilla's is fairly centralised and very complex and heavy, but gives 
    fairly immediate feedback if anything gets broken. Samba's is much 
    lighter, distributed, and they still apparently see good value in it. 
    (Samba uses a "torture test" - perhaps we need one of those in addition 
    to the regression tests.)
    
    Maybe it wouldn't be of great value to PostgreSQL. And maybe it would. I 
    have an open mind about it. I don't think incompleteness is an argument 
    against it, though.
    
    cheers
    
    andrew
    
    
    
  55. Re: Build farm

    Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> — 2003-11-19T18:18:28Z

    Andrew Dunstan writes:
    
    > Maybe it wouldn't be of great value to PostgreSQL. And maybe it would. I
    > have an open mind about it. I don't think incompleteness is an argument
    > against it, though.
    
    If you want to do it, by all means go for it.  I'm sure it would give
    everyone a fuzzy feeling to see the green lights everywhere.  But
    realistically, don't expect any significant practical benefits, such
    cutting beta time by 10%.
    
    The Samba build daemon suite is pretty good.  We have a couple of those
    hosts in our office in fact.  (I think they're building PostgreSQL
    regularly as well.)  A tip: You might find that adopting the source code
    of the Samba suite to PostgreSQL is harder than writing a new one.
    
    -- 
    Peter Eisentraut   peter_e@gmx.net
    
    
    
  56. Re: Build farm

    Andrew Dunstan <andrew@dunslane.net> — 2003-11-19T19:27:31Z

    Peter Eisentraut wrote:
    
    >The Samba build daemon suite is pretty good.  We have a couple of those
    >hosts in our office in fact.  (I think they're building PostgreSQL
    >regularly as well.)  A tip: You might find that adopting the source code
    >of the Samba suite to PostgreSQL is harder than writing a new one.
    >  
    >
    
    Yes, I agree. I have looked at it for ideas, but not for code. I'm not 
    using rsync or anything like that, for instance. I'm going for something 
    very simple to start with.
    
    Essentially what I have is something like this pseudocode:
    
      cvs update
      check if there really was an update and if not exit
      configure; get config.log
      make 2>&1 | make-filter >makelog
      make check 2>&1 | check-filter > checklog
      (TBD) send config status, make status, check status, logfiles
      make distclean
    
    The send piece will probably be a perl script using LWP and talking to a 
    CGI script.
    
    cheers
    
    andrew
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
  57. Re: Build farm

    Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> — 2003-11-19T23:42:58Z

    Andrew Dunstan writes:
    
    > Essentially what I have is something like this pseudocode:
    >
    >   cvs update
    
    Be sure check past branches as well.
    
    >   check if there really was an update and if not exit
    
    OK.
    
    >   configure; get config.log
    
    Ideally, you'd try all possible option combinations for configure.  Or at
    least enable everything.
    
    >   make 2>&1 | make-filter >makelog
    >   make check 2>&1 | check-filter > checklog
    
    You could also try out make distcheck.  It tries out the complete build,
    installation, uninstallation, regression test, and distribution building.
    
    >   (TBD) send config status, make status, check status, logfiles
    
    OK.
    
    >   make distclean
    
    When I played around with this, always copied the CVS tree to a new
    directory and deleted that one at the end.  That way, bugs in the clean
    procedure (known to happen) don't trip up the whole process.
    
    > The send piece will probably be a perl script using LWP and talking to a
    > CGI script.
    
    That will be the difficult part to organize, if it's supposed to be
    distributed and autonomous.
    
    -- 
    Peter Eisentraut   peter_e@gmx.net
    
    
    
  58. Re: Build farm

    Andrew Dunstan <andrew@dunslane.net> — 2003-11-20T14:58:33Z

    Peter Eisentraut wrote:
    
    >Andrew Dunstan writes:
    >
    >  
    >
    >>Essentially what I have is something like this pseudocode:
    >>
    >>  cvs update
    >>    
    >>
    >
    >Be sure check past branches as well.
    >
    >  
    >
    >>  check if there really was an update and if not exit
    >>    
    >>
    >
    >OK.
    >
    >  
    >
    >>  configure; get config.log
    >>    
    >>
    >
    >Ideally, you'd try all possible option combinations for configure.  Or at
    >least enable everything.
    >
    
    I have had in mind from the start doing multiple configurations and 
    multiple branches.
    
    Right now I'm working only with everything/head, but will make provision 
    for multiple sets of both.
    
    How many branches back do you think should we go? Right now I'd be 
    inclined only to do REL7_4_STABLE and HEAD as a default. Maybe we could 
    set the default to be gettable from the web server so that as new 
    releases come along build farm members using the default wouldn't need 
    to make any changes.
    
    However, everything would also be settable locally on each build farm 
    member in an options file.
    
    >
    >  
    >
    >>  make 2>&1 | make-filter >makelog
    >>  make check 2>&1 | check-filter > checklog
    >>    
    >>
    >
    >You could also try out make distcheck.  It tries out the complete build,
    >installation, uninstallation, regression test, and distribution building.
    >  
    >
    
    OK.
    
    >  
    >
    >>  (TBD) send config status, make status, check status, logfiles
    >>    
    >>
    >
    >OK.
    >
    >  
    >
    >>  make distclean
    >>    
    >>
    >
    >When I played around with this, always copied the CVS tree to a new
    >directory and deleted that one at the end.  That way, bugs in the clean
    >procedure (known to happen) don't trip up the whole process.
    >  
    >
    
    OK. We've also seen odd problems with "cvs update", I seem to recall, 
    but I'd rather avoid having to fetch the entire tree for each run, to 
    keep bandwidth use down. (I believe "cvs update" should be fairly 
    reliable if there are no local changes, which would be true in this 
    instance).
    
    >  
    >
    >>The send piece will probably be a perl script using LWP and talking to a
    >>CGI script.
    >>    
    >>
    >
    >That will be the difficult part to organize, if it's supposed to be
    >distributed and autonomous.
    >  
    >
    
    sending the results won't be a huge problem - storing and displaying 
    them nicely will be a bit more fun :-)
    
    Upload of results would be over authenticated SSL to prevent spurious 
    results being fed to us - all you would need to join the build farm 
    would be a username/password from the buildfarm admin.
    
    Thanks for your input
    
    cheers
    
    andrew
    
    
    
    
  59. Re: Release cycle length

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2003-11-20T20:19:38Z

    Jan Wieck <JanWieck@Yahoo.com> writes:
    > On Tue, 18 Nov 2003, Peter Eisentraut wrote:
    >> The time from release 7.3 to release 7.4 was 355 days, an all-time high.
    >> We really need to shorten that.
    
    > I don't see much of a point for a shorter release cycle as long as we 
    > don't get rid of the initdb requirement for releases that don't change 
    > the system catalog structure. All we gain from that is spreading out the 
    > number of different versions used in production.
    
    Yeah, I think the main issue in all this is that for real production
    sites, upgrading Postgres across major releases is *painful*.  We have
    to find a solution to that before it makes sense to speed up the
    major-release cycle.
    
    By the same token, I'm not sure that there's much of a market for
    "development" releases --- people who find a 7.3->7.4 upgrade painful
    aren't going to want to add additional upgrades to incompatible
    intermediate states.  If we could fix that, there'd be more interest.
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
  60. Re: Release cycle length

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2003-11-20T20:33:15Z

    Kevin Brown <kevin@sysexperts.com> writes:
    > ... That's why the release methodology used by the Linux kernel development
    > team is a reasonable one.
    
    I do not think we have the manpower to manage multiple active
    development branches.  The Postgres developer community is a fraction of
    the size of the Linux community; if we try to adopt what they do we'll
    just drown in work.  It's hard enough to deal with the existing level of
    commitment to back-patching one stable release --- I know that we miss
    back-patching bug fixes that probably should have been back-patched.
    And the stuff that does get back-patched isn't really tested to the
    level that it ought to be, which discourages us from applying fixes
    to the stable branch if they are too large to be "obviously correct".
    I don't see manpower emerging from the woodwork to fix those problems.
    
    If we were doing active feature development in more than one branch
    I think our process would break down completely.
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
  61. Re: Release cycle length

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2003-11-20T20:38:05Z

    Larry Rosenman <ler@lerctr.org> writes:
    > <peter_e@gmx.net> wrote:
    >> 1. Start platform testing on day 1 of beta.  Last minute fixes for AIX or
    >> UnixWare are really becoming old jokes.
    
    > The only reason we had last minute stuff for UnixWare this time was the
    > timing of PG's release and the UP3 release from SCO.
    
    Yes.  The late fixes for OS X also arose from the fact that Apple
    released a new OS X version late in our beta cycle.  I don't think it's
    reasonable to complain that there was insufficient port testing done
    earlier; the issues didn't come from that.
    
    I do agree with the opinion that our beta cycles are getting too long,
    and that it's not clear we are getting any additional reliability out
    of the longer time period.
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
  62. Re: Release cycle length

    Christopher Kings-Lynne <chriskl@familyhealth.com.au> — 2003-11-21T01:38:50Z

    > Yeah, I think the main issue in all this is that for real production
    > sites, upgrading Postgres across major releases is *painful*.  We have
    > to find a solution to that before it makes sense to speed up the
    > major-release cycle.
    
    Well, I think one of the simplest is to do a topological sort of objects 
      in pg_dump (between object classes that need it), AND regression 
    testing for pg_dump :)
    
    Chris
    
    
    
    
  63. Re: Release cycle length

    Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@dcc.uchile.cl> — 2003-11-21T13:03:59Z

    On Fri, Nov 21, 2003 at 09:38:50AM +0800, Christopher Kings-Lynne wrote:
    > >Yeah, I think the main issue in all this is that for real production
    > >sites, upgrading Postgres across major releases is *painful*.  We have
    > >to find a solution to that before it makes sense to speed up the
    > >major-release cycle.
    > 
    > Well, I think one of the simplest is to do a topological sort of objects 
    >  in pg_dump (between object classes that need it), AND regression 
    > testing for pg_dump :)
    
    One of the most complex would be to avoid the need of pg_dump for
    upgrades ...
    
    -- 
    Alvaro Herrera (<alvherre[@]dcc.uchile.cl>)
    "I call it GNU/Linux. Except the GNU/ is silent." (Ben Reiter)
    
    
  64. Re: Release cycle length

    Jan Wieck <janwieck@yahoo.com> — 2003-11-21T18:32:38Z

    Alvaro Herrera wrote:
    
    > On Fri, Nov 21, 2003 at 09:38:50AM +0800, Christopher Kings-Lynne wrote:
    >> >Yeah, I think the main issue in all this is that for real production
    >> >sites, upgrading Postgres across major releases is *painful*.  We have
    >> >to find a solution to that before it makes sense to speed up the
    >> >major-release cycle.
    >> 
    >> Well, I think one of the simplest is to do a topological sort of objects 
    >>  in pg_dump (between object classes that need it), AND regression 
    >> testing for pg_dump :)
    > 
    > One of the most complex would be to avoid the need of pg_dump for
    > upgrades ...
    > 
    
    We don't need a simple way, we need a way to create some sort of catalog 
    diff and "a safe" way to apply that to an existing installation during 
    the upgrade.
    
    I think with a shutdown postmaster, a standalone backend used to check 
    that no conflicts exist in any DB, then using the new backend in 
    bootstrap mode to apply the changes, could be an idea to think of. It 
    would still require some downtime, but nobody can avoid that when 
    replacing the postgres binaries anyway, so that's not a real issue. As 
    long as it eliminates dump, initdb, reload it will be acceptable.
    
    
    Jan
    
    -- 
    #======================================================================#
    # It's easier to get forgiveness for being wrong than for being right. #
    # Let's break this rule - forgive me.                                  #
    #================================================== JanWieck@Yahoo.com #
    
    
    
  65. Re: Build farm

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2003-11-21T18:47:48Z

    Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> writes:
    > Andrew Dunstan writes:
    >> Maybe it wouldn't be of great value to PostgreSQL. And maybe it would. I
    >> have an open mind about it. I don't think incompleteness is an argument
    >> against it, though.
    
    > If you want to do it, by all means go for it.  I'm sure it would give
    > everyone a fuzzy feeling to see the green lights everywhere.  But
    > realistically, don't expect any significant practical benefits, such
    > cutting beta time by 10%.
    
    I think the main value of a build farm is that we'd get nearly immediate
    feedback about the majority of simple porting problems.  Your previous
    arguments that it wouldn't smoke everything out are certainly valid ---
    but we wouldn't abandon the regression tests just because they don't
    find everything.  Immediate feedback is good because a patch can be
    fixed while it's still fresh in the author's mind.
    
    I'm for it ...
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
  66. Re: Release cycle length

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2003-11-21T19:08:28Z

    Jan Wieck <JanWieck@Yahoo.com> writes:
    > Alvaro Herrera wrote:
    >> One of the most complex would be to avoid the need of pg_dump for
    >> upgrades ...
    
    > We don't need a simple way, we need a way to create some sort of catalog 
    > diff and "a safe" way to apply that to an existing installation during 
    > the upgrade.
    
    I still think that pg_upgrade is the right idea: load a schema dump from
    the old database into the new one, then transfer the user data files and
    indexes via cheating (doubly linking, if possible).  Obviously there is
    a lot of work still to make this happen reliably, but we have seen
    proof-of-concept some while ago, whereas "catalog diffs" are pie in the
    sky IMHO.  (You could not use either the old postmaster version or the
    new version to apply such a diff...)
    
    A big advantage of the pg_upgrade concept in my mind is that if it fails
    partway through, you need have made no changes to the original
    installation.  Any mid-course problem with an in-place-diff approach
    leaves you completely screwed :-(
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
  67. Re: Build farm

    Andrew Dunstan <andrew@dunslane.net> — 2003-11-21T19:39:39Z

    Tom Lane wrote:
    
    >
    >I think the main value of a build farm is that we'd get nearly immediate
    >feedback about the majority of simple porting problems.  Your previous
    >arguments that it wouldn't smoke everything out are certainly valid ---
    >but we wouldn't abandon the regression tests just because they don't
    >find everything.  Immediate feedback is good because a patch can be
    >fixed while it's still fresh in the author's mind.
    >
    
    Yes, I seem to recall seeing several instances of things like "you mean 
    foonix version 97 1/2 has a bad frobnitz.h?" over the last 6 months. 
    Having that caught early is exactly the advantage, I believe.
    
    >
    >I'm for it ...
    >  
    >
    
    I'm working on it :-)
    
    Regarding "make distcheck" that Peter suggested I use, unless I'm 
    mistaken it carefully does its own configure, thus ignoring the 
    configure options set in the original directory. Perhaps we need either 
    to have the distcheck target pick up all the --with/--without and 
    --enable/--disable options, or to have a similar target that does that.
    
    Thoughts?
    
    cheers
    
    andrew
    
    
    
    
  68. Re: Release cycle length

    Oli Sennhauser <oli.sennhauser@bluewin.ch> — 2003-11-21T21:18:26Z

    Hello hackers
    
    Sorry when I am talking to the gurus...
    
    There is a database, which has a concept called "Transportable 
    Tablespace" (TTS). Would it not be a verry easy and fast solution to 
    just do this with the Tables, Index and all non catalog related files.
    - You create a new db cluster (e.g 8.0).
    - Generate a TTS export skript.
    - Shut the (old) db-cluster (files should be consistent now, ev. do 
    something with the log files before).
    - Move the files (eventually not needed) and
    - plug it in to the new db cluster (via the export skript).
    
    Expected downtime (without moving data files) 5-10 minutes.
    
    Regards Oli
    
    -------------------------------------------------------
    
    Oli Sennhauser
    Database-Engineer (Oracle & PostgreSQL)
    Rebenweg 6
    CH - 8610 Uster / Switzerland
    
    Phone (+41) 1 940 24 82 or Mobile (+41) 79 450 49 14
    e-Mail oli.sennhauser@bluewin.ch
    Website http://mypage.bluewin.ch/shinguz/PostgreSQL/
    
    Secure (signed/encrypted) e-Mail with a Free Personal SwissSign ID: http://www.swisssign.ch
    
    Import the SwissSign Root Certificate: http://swisssign.net/cgi-bin/trust/import
    
    
  69. Re: Build farm

    Jean-Michel POURE <jm@poure.com> — 2003-11-24T09:14:48Z

    Le Vendredi 21 Novembre 2003 19:47, Tom Lane a écrit :
    > I think the main value of a build farm is that we'd get nearly immediate
    > feedback about the majority of simple porting problems.  Your previous
    > arguments that it wouldn't smoke everything out are certainly valid ---
    > but we wouldn't abandon the regression tests just because they don't
    > find everything.  Immediate feedback is good because a patch can be
    > fixed while it's still fresh in the author's mind.
    
    Dear friends,
    
    We have a small build farm for pgAdmin covering Win32, FreeBSD and most GNU/
    Linux systems. See http://www.pgadmin.org/pgadmin3/download.php#snapshots
    
    The advantage are immediate feedback and correction of problems. Also, in a 
    release cycle, developers and translators are quite motivated to see their 
    work published fast. 
    
    Of course, it is always hard to "mesure" the real impact of a build farm. My 
    opinion it that it is quite positive, as it helps tighten the links between 
    people, which is free software is mostly about.
    
    Cheers,
    Jean-Michel Pouré
    
    
    
    
  70. Re: Build farm

    Andrew Dunstan <andrew@dunslane.net> — 2003-11-24T12:55:01Z

    
    Jean-Michel POURE wrote:
    
    >Le Vendredi 21 Novembre 2003 19:47, Tom Lane a écrit :
    >  
    >
    >>I think the main value of a build farm is that we'd get nearly immediate
    >>feedback about the majority of simple porting problems.  Your previous
    >>arguments that it wouldn't smoke everything out are certainly valid ---
    >>but we wouldn't abandon the regression tests just because they don't
    >>find everything.  Immediate feedback is good because a patch can be
    >>fixed while it's still fresh in the author's mind.
    >>    
    >>
    >
    >Dear friends,
    >
    >We have a small build farm for pgAdmin covering Win32, FreeBSD and most GNU/
    >Linux systems. See http://www.pgadmin.org/pgadmin3/download.php#snapshots
    >
    >The advantage are immediate feedback and correction of problems. Also, in a 
    >release cycle, developers and translators are quite motivated to see their 
    >work published fast. 
    >
    >Of course, it is always hard to "mesure" the real impact of a build farm. My 
    >opinion it that it is quite positive, as it helps tighten the links between 
    >people, which is free software is mostly about.
    >
    >  
    >
    
    Right. But I think we have been talking about using the build farm to do 
    test builds rather than to provide snapshots. I'd be very wary of 
    providing arbitrary snapshots of postgres, whereas I'd be prepared to 
    try a snapshot of pgadmin3 under certain circumstances. (Also, building 
    your own snapshot of postgres is somewhat easier than building your own 
    snapshot of pgadmin3).
    
    cheers
    
    andrew
    
    
    
  71. Re: Build farm

    Andreas Pflug <pgadmin@pse-consulting.de> — 2003-11-24T15:38:20Z

    Andrew Dunstan wrote:
    
    >
    >
    > Jean-Michel POURE wrote:
    >
    >> Le Vendredi 21 Novembre 2003 19:47, Tom Lane a écrit :
    >>  
    >>
    >>> I think the main value of a build farm is that we'd get nearly 
    >>> immediate
    >>> feedback about the majority of simple porting problems.  Your previous
    >>> arguments that it wouldn't smoke everything out are certainly valid ---
    >>> but we wouldn't abandon the regression tests just because they don't
    >>> find everything.  Immediate feedback is good because a patch can be
    >>> fixed while it's still fresh in the author's mind.
    >>>   
    >>
    >>
    >> Dear friends,
    >>
    >> We have a small build farm for pgAdmin covering Win32, FreeBSD and 
    >> most GNU/
    >> Linux systems. See 
    >> http://www.pgadmin.org/pgadmin3/download.php#snapshots
    >>
    >> The advantage are immediate feedback and correction of problems. 
    >> Also, in a release cycle, developers and translators are quite 
    >> motivated to see their work published fast.
    >> Of course, it is always hard to "mesure" the real impact of a build 
    >> farm. My opinion it that it is quite positive, as it helps tighten 
    >> the links between people, which is free software is mostly about.
    >>
    >>  
    >>
    >
    > Right. But I think we have been talking about using the build farm to 
    > do test builds rather than to provide snapshots. I'd be very wary of 
    > providing arbitrary snapshots of postgres, whereas I'd be prepared to 
    > try a snapshot of pgadmin3 under certain circumstances. (Also, 
    > building your own snapshot of postgres is somewhat easier than 
    > building your own snapshot of pgadmin3).
    
    Testing a build and creating a snapshot compilation is quite the same, 
    just a different name and announcement. I agree that using a pgadmin 
    snapshot is different from pgsql, somebody using a bleeding edge pgsql 
    version should be prepared to compile it on his own machine.
    
    And a tiny correction: The farm member for win32 is my machine, and it's 
    operated manually :-)
    
    Regards,
    Andreas
    
    
    
    
  72. Re: Build farm

    Jean-Michel POURE <jm@poure.com> — 2003-11-24T16:20:17Z

    Le Lundi 24 Novembre 2003 16:38, Andreas Pflug a écrit :
    > And a tiny correction: The farm member for win32 is my machine, and it's
    > operated manually :-)
    
    Some GNU/Linux farm animals are living in my garage running on very old 50 
    euros machines ... Ancient farming :-)
    
    By the way, we would love if someone could provide pgAdmin3 daily snapshots 
    under other systems. The list of platforms can be viewed here, anyone is 
    welcome to provide additional ones:
    
    http://www.pgadmin.org/pgadmin3/download.php#snapshots
    
    Cheers, Jean-Michel
    
    
    
  73. Re: Build farm

    Bruce Momjian <pgman@candle.pha.pa.us> — 2003-11-25T02:10:49Z

    FYI, the HP testdrive farm, http://www.testdrive.hp.com, has shared
    directories for most of the machines, meaning you can CVS update once
    and telnet in to compile for each platform.
    
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Andrew Dunstan wrote:
    > Tom Lane wrote:
    > 
    > >
    > >I think the main value of a build farm is that we'd get nearly immediate
    > >feedback about the majority of simple porting problems.  Your previous
    > >arguments that it wouldn't smoke everything out are certainly valid ---
    > >but we wouldn't abandon the regression tests just because they don't
    > >find everything.  Immediate feedback is good because a patch can be
    > >fixed while it's still fresh in the author's mind.
    > >
    > 
    > Yes, I seem to recall seeing several instances of things like "you mean 
    > foonix version 97 1/2 has a bad frobnitz.h?" over the last 6 months. 
    > Having that caught early is exactly the advantage, I believe.
    > 
    > >
    > >I'm for it ...
    > >  
    > >
    > 
    > I'm working on it :-)
    > 
    > Regarding "make distcheck" that Peter suggested I use, unless I'm 
    > mistaken it carefully does its own configure, thus ignoring the 
    > configure options set in the original directory. Perhaps we need either 
    > to have the distcheck target pick up all the --with/--without and 
    > --enable/--disable options, or to have a similar target that does that.
    > 
    > Thoughts?
    > 
    > cheers
    > 
    > andrew
    > 
    > 
    > 
    > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)---------------------------
    > TIP 7: don't forget to increase your free space map settings
    > 
    
    -- 
      Bruce Momjian                        |  http://candle.pha.pa.us
      pgman@candle.pha.pa.us               |  (610) 359-1001
      +  If your life is a hard drive,     |  13 Roberts Road
      +  Christ can be your backup.        |  Newtown Square, Pennsylvania 19073
    
    
  74. Re: Build farm

    Jim C. Nasby <jim@nasby.net> — 2003-11-25T04:42:45Z

    On Wed, Nov 19, 2003 at 04:34:27PM +0100, Peter Eisentraut wrote:
    > Hence the open-source community approach.  Closed-source development teams
    > can do all the above, with great effort.  But by throwing out the code and
    > have real people test them on real systems with real applications, you can
    > do much better.
     
    Would it be reasonable to promote users testing daily snapshots with
    popular applications? I'm guessing there's not many applications that
    have automated test frameworks, but any that do would theoretically
    provide another good test of PGSQL changes.
    -- 
    Jim C. Nasby, Database Consultant                  jim@nasby.net
    Member: Triangle Fraternity, Sports Car Club of America
    Give your computer some brain candy! www.distributed.net Team #1828
    
    Windows: "Where do you want to go today?"
    Linux: "Where do you want to go tomorrow?"
    FreeBSD: "Are you guys coming, or what?"
    
    
  75. Re: Build farm

    Christopher Kings-Lynne <chriskl@familyhealth.com.au> — 2003-11-25T05:05:11Z

    > Would it be reasonable to promote users testing daily snapshots with
    > popular applications? I'm guessing there's not many applications that
    > have automated test frameworks, but any that do would theoretically
    > provide another good test of PGSQL changes.
    
    May I quote Joel on Software here?
    
    http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/fog0000000043.html
    
    The Joel Test
    
        1. Do you use source control?
        2. Can you make a build in one step?
        3. Do you make daily builds?
        4. Do you have a bug database?
        5. Do you fix bugs before writing new code?
        6. Do you have an up-to-date schedule?
        7. Do you have a spec?
        8. Do programmers have quiet working conditions?
        9. Do you use the best tools money can buy?
       10. Do you have testers?
       11. Do new candidates write code during their interview?
       12. Do you do hallway usability testing?
    
    "The neat thing about The Joel Test is that it's easy to get a quick yes 
    or no to each question. You don't have to figure out 
    lines-of-code-per-day or average-bugs-per-inflection-point. Give your 
    team 1 point for each "yes" answer. The bummer about The Joel Test is 
    that you really shouldn't use it to make sure that your nuclear power 
    plant software is safe.
    
    A score of 12 is perfect, 11 is tolerable, but 10 or lower and you've 
    got serious problems. The truth is that most software organizations are 
    running with a score of 2 or 3, and they need serious help, because 
    companies like Microsoft run at 12 full-time. "
    
    Not everything there applies to us, of course.
    
    Chris
    
    
    
    
  76. Re: Release cycle length

    Jim C. Nasby <jim@nasby.net> — 2003-11-25T05:08:44Z

    On Fri, Nov 21, 2003 at 01:32:38PM -0500, Jan Wieck wrote:
    > bootstrap mode to apply the changes, could be an idea to think of. It 
    > would still require some downtime, but nobody can avoid that when 
    > replacing the postgres binaries anyway, so that's not a real issue. As 
    > long as it eliminates dump, initdb, reload it will be acceptable.
     
    Has anyone looked at using replication as a migration method? If
    replication can be setup in such a way that you can replicate from an
    old version to a new version, you can use that to build the new version
    of the database on a seperate machine/instance while the old version is
    still live. With some sophisticated middleware, you could theoretically
    migrate without any downtime.
    -- 
    Jim C. Nasby, Database Consultant                  jim@nasby.net
    Member: Triangle Fraternity, Sports Car Club of America
    Give your computer some brain candy! www.distributed.net Team #1828
    
    Windows: "Where do you want to go today?"
    Linux: "Where do you want to go tomorrow?"
    FreeBSD: "Are you guys coming, or what?"
    
    
  77. Re: Release cycle length

    Chris Browne <cbbrowne@acm.org> — 2003-11-25T05:51:05Z

    Quoth jim@nasby.net ("Jim C. Nasby"):
    > On Fri, Nov 21, 2003 at 01:32:38PM -0500, Jan Wieck wrote:
    >> bootstrap mode to apply the changes, could be an idea to think of. It 
    >> would still require some downtime, but nobody can avoid that when 
    >> replacing the postgres binaries anyway, so that's not a real issue. As 
    >> long as it eliminates dump, initdb, reload it will be acceptable.
    >  
    > Has anyone looked at using replication as a migration method? If
    > replication can be setup in such a way that you can replicate from an
    > old version to a new version, you can use that to build the new version
    > of the database on a seperate machine/instance while the old version is
    > still live. With some sophisticated middleware, you could theoretically
    > migrate without any downtime.
    
    The idea has indeed been "looked at," and seems pretty feasible.
    
    It would certainly take some sophisticated middleware to totally evade
    downtime.  But replicating from "old version" to "new version" does
    have the merit of keeping the downtime to fairly much a minimum.
    -- 
    wm(X,Y):-write(X),write('@'),write(Y). wm('cbbrowne','cbbrowne.com').
    http://www3.sympatico.ca/cbbrowne/x.html
    :FATAL ERROR -- VECTOR OUT OF HILBERT SPACE
    
    
  78. Re: Build farm

    Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> — 2003-11-25T06:48:03Z

    Bruce Momjian writes:
    
    > FYI, the HP testdrive farm, http://www.testdrive.hp.com, has shared
    > directories for most of the machines, meaning you can CVS update once
    > and telnet in to compile for each platform.
    
    Except that you can't open connections to the outside from these machines.
    
    -- 
    Peter Eisentraut   peter_e@gmx.net
    
    
    
  79. Re: Build farm

    Andrew Dunstan <andrew@dunslane.net> — 2003-11-25T14:49:33Z

    Bruce Momjian wrote:
    
    >FYI, the HP testdrive farm, http://www.testdrive.hp.com, has shared
    >directories for most of the machines, meaning you can CVS update once
    >and telnet in to compile for each platform.
    >
    >  
    >
    
    As Peter pointed out, these machines are firewalled. But presumably one could upload a snapshot to them. What I had in mind was a more distributed system, though. 
    
    Of course, these things are not mutually exclusive - using the HP testdrive farm looks like it might be nice. But it would be hard to automate, I suspect.
    
    cheers
    
    andrew
    
    
    
    
    
    
  80. Re: Build farm

    Bruce Momjian <pgman@candle.pha.pa.us> — 2003-11-25T15:14:50Z

    Peter Eisentraut wrote:
    > Bruce Momjian writes:
    > 
    > > FYI, the HP testdrive farm, http://www.testdrive.hp.com, has shared
    > > directories for most of the machines, meaning you can CVS update once
    > > and telnet in to compile for each platform.
    > 
    > Except that you can't open connections to the outside from these machines.
    
    Oh, yea.  You can connect to the machines with ftp, so I guess you would
    have to CVS update on your local machine, then push the changes to the
    farm.
    
    -- 
      Bruce Momjian                        |  http://candle.pha.pa.us
      pgman@candle.pha.pa.us               |  (610) 359-1001
      +  If your life is a hard drive,     |  13 Roberts Road
      +  Christ can be your backup.        |  Newtown Square, Pennsylvania 19073
    
    
  81. Re: Build farm

    Bruce Momjian <pgman@candle.pha.pa.us> — 2003-11-25T16:42:57Z

    Andrew Dunstan wrote:
    > Bruce Momjian wrote:
    > 
    > >FYI, the HP testdrive farm, http://www.testdrive.hp.com, has shared
    > >directories for most of the machines, meaning you can CVS update once
    > >and telnet in to compile for each platform.
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > 
    > As Peter pointed out, these machines are firewalled. But presumably
    > one could upload a snapshot to them. What I had in mind was a
    > more distributed system, though.
    > 
    > Of course, these things are not mutually exclusive - using the
    > HP testdrive farm looks like it might be nice. But it would be
    > hard to automate, I suspect.
    
    I figured you could just upload once and telnet and build on each
    machine.
    
    --
      Bruce Momjian                        |  http://candle.pha.pa.us
      pgman@candle.pha.pa.us               |  (610) 359-1001
      +  If your life is a hard drive,     |  13 Roberts Road
      +  Christ can be your backup.        |  Newtown Square, Pennsylvania 19073
    
    
  82. Re: Build farm

    Andrew Dunstan <andrew@dunslane.net> — 2003-11-25T17:23:06Z

    Bruce Momjian wrote:
    
    >Andrew Dunstan wrote:
    >  
    >
    >>Bruce Momjian wrote:
    >>
    >>    
    >>
    >>>FYI, the HP testdrive farm, http://www.testdrive.hp.com, has shared
    >>>directories for most of the machines, meaning you can CVS update once
    >>>and telnet in to compile for each platform.
    >>>
    >>>
    >>>
    >>>      
    >>>
    >>As Peter pointed out, these machines are firewalled. But presumably
    >>one could upload a snapshot to them. What I had in mind was a
    >>more distributed system, though.
    >>
    >>Of course, these things are not mutually exclusive - using the
    >>HP testdrive farm looks like it might be nice. But it would be
    >>hard to automate, I suspect.
    >>    
    >>
    >
    >I figured you could just upload once and telnet and build on each
    >machine.
    >
    >  
    >
    
    What I'm working on (slowly - I'm quite busy right now, and about to be 
    away from home for 5 days) is a system which would (or could) run from 
    cron on every member of the farm, and upload its results to a central 
    server where it could be displayed, in a somewhat similar way to the way 
    the Samba build farm works - see http://build.samba.org/ - so we'd be 
    able to see at a glance when something is broken and where and why. We 
    could also incorporate email notification of breakage, as a refinement.
    
    I have a few pieces of this working but not a full suite yet - it will 
    essentially be 3 perl scripts - one on the client (to run the update(s), 
    build(s) and upload the results) and two on the central server (one for 
    upload and one for display). When I get a demo page done I'll show it 
    working with a couple of hosts.
    
    Of course, you can automate (almost) anything, including telnet, but 
    right now I'm assuming the farm members will have internet connectivity.
    
    cheers
    
    andrew
    
    
    
    
    
  83. Re: Release cycle length

    Andrew Sullivan <andrew@libertyrms.info> — 2003-11-26T04:25:34Z

    On Mon, Nov 24, 2003 at 11:08:44PM -0600, Jim C. Nasby wrote:
    
    > Has anyone looked at using replication as a migration method? If
    
    Looked at?  Sure.  Heck, I've done it.  Yes, it works.  Is it
    painless?  Well, that depends on whether you think using erserver is
    painless. ;-)  It's rather less downtime than pg_dump | psql, I'll
    tell you.
    
    A
    
    -- 
    ----
    Andrew Sullivan                         204-4141 Yonge Street
    Afilias Canada                        Toronto, Ontario Canada
    <andrew@libertyrms.info>                              M2P 2A8
                                             +1 416 646 3304 x110
    
    
    
  84. Re: Build farm

    nobody <nobody@nowhere.near.here> — 2003-11-26T17:17:26Z

    Just a thought. You could also run the regression test automatically after a
    successful build?
    
    "Andrew Dunstan" <andrew@dunslane.net> wrote in message
    news:3FC1FFA5.9030003@dunslane.net...
    >
    >
    > Jean-Michel POURE wrote:
    >
    > >Le Vendredi 21 Novembre 2003 19:47, Tom Lane a crit :
    > >
    > >
    > >>I think the main value of a build farm is that we'd get nearly immediate
    > >>feedback about the majority of simple porting problems.  Your previous
    > >>arguments that it wouldn't smoke everything out are certainly valid ---
    > >>but we wouldn't abandon the regression tests just because they don't
    > >>find everything.  Immediate feedback is good because a patch can be
    > >>fixed while it's still fresh in the author's mind.
    > >>
    > >>
    > >
    > >Dear friends,
    > >
    > >We have a small build farm for pgAdmin covering Win32, FreeBSD and most
    GNU/
    > >Linux systems. See http://www.pgadmin.org/pgadmin3/download.php#snapshots
    > >
    > >The advantage are immediate feedback and correction of problems. Also, in
    a
    > >release cycle, developers and translators are quite motivated to see
    their
    > >work published fast.
    > >
    > >Of course, it is always hard to "mesure" the real impact of a build farm.
    My
    > >opinion it that it is quite positive, as it helps tighten the links
    between
    > >people, which is free software is mostly about.
    > >
    > >
    > >
    >
    > Right. But I think we have been talking about using the build farm to do
    > test builds rather than to provide snapshots. I'd be very wary of
    > providing arbitrary snapshots of postgres, whereas I'd be prepared to
    > try a snapshot of pgadmin3 under certain circumstances. (Also, building
    > your own snapshot of postgres is somewhat easier than building your own
    > snapshot of pgadmin3).
    >
    > cheers
    >
    > andrew
    >
    >
    > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)---------------------------
    > TIP 3: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate
    >       subscribe-nomail command to majordomo@postgresql.org so that your
    >       message can get through to the mailing list cleanly
    >
    
    
    
    
  85. Re: Release cycle length

    Jim C. Nasby <jim@nasby.net> — 2003-12-09T00:49:31Z

    Any chance you might be able to put together a HOWTO on this? I think it
    would be extremely valuable to a lot of people.
    
    On Tue, Nov 25, 2003 at 11:25:34PM -0500, Andrew Sullivan wrote:
    > On Mon, Nov 24, 2003 at 11:08:44PM -0600, Jim C. Nasby wrote:
    > 
    > > Has anyone looked at using replication as a migration method? If
    > 
    > Looked at?  Sure.  Heck, I've done it.  Yes, it works.  Is it
    > painless?  Well, that depends on whether you think using erserver is
    > painless. ;-)  It's rather less downtime than pg_dump | psql, I'll
    > tell you.
    -- 
    Jim C. Nasby, Database Consultant                  jim@nasby.net
    Member: Triangle Fraternity, Sports Car Club of America
    Give your computer some brain candy! www.distributed.net Team #1828
    
    Windows: "Where do you want to go today?"
    Linux: "Where do you want to go tomorrow?"
    FreeBSD: "Are you guys coming, or what?"