Re: AIX support
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Commits
GET /api/v1/messages/:b64id/commits
the thread's linked commits as JSON, with link sources.
API reference →
-
Restore AIX support.
- 4a1b05caa55d 19 (unreleased) landed
-
pg_createsubscriber: Improve error messages.
- 898c131b58a0 18.0 cited
-
Use <stdint.h> and <inttypes.h> for c.h integers.
- 962da900ac8f 18.0 cited
-
Stabilize jsonb_path_query test case.
- af2115226831 18.0 cited
-
Fix C23 compiler warning
- d2b4b4c2259e 18.0 cited
-
pg_stat_statements: Add tests for nested queries with level tracking
- 45e0ba30fc40 18.0 cited
-
Add missing newline at the end of index_including.sql
- 54b69f1bd730 17.0 cited
-
Remove AIX support
- 0b16bb8776bb 17.0 cited
-
Fix s_lock.h PPC assembly code to be compatible with native AIX assembler.
- c41a1215f049 9.6.0 cited
-
Use a non-locking initial test in TAS_SPIN on PPC.
- bc2a050d4097 9.2.0 cited
-
Use LWSYNC in place of SYNC/ISYNC in PPC spinlocks, where possible.
- 631beeac3598 9.2.0 cited
-
Use mutex hint bit in PPC LWARX instructions, where possible.
- 5cfa8dd3007d 9.2.0 cited
-
Adjust TAS assembly as per recent discussions: use "+m"(*lock) everywhere
- 109867748259 8.0.0 cited
-
Apple's assembler likes the inlined TAS syntax too, so no reason to
- f9ba0a7fe563 7.4.1 cited
-
Tighten up register usage for inline PPC version of tas().
- eb5e4c58d137 7.4.1 cited
-
Put the isync where it's supposed to be.
- cd35d601b859 7.4.1 cited
-
> > I'll re-check that with the ppc architecture guy here.
- ceb4f5ea9c2c 7.4.1 cited
-
Fix PPC s_lock operations to work correctly on multi-CPU machines.
- 7233aae50bea 7.3.1 cited
-
I tried to build PostgreSQL with the following step to see backends hung
- 50938576d482 7.3.1 cited
-
Complete merge of all old man page information.
- f2f43efbe1d5 7.1.1 cited
-
s_lock aix patch.
- e3b06a871b63 7.1.1 cited
Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@gmail.com> writes: > Oh, sorry, I had missed the part where newer compilers fix the issue > too. Old out-of-support versions of AIX running old compilers, what > fun. Indeed. One of the topics that needs investigation if you want to pursue this is which AIX system and compiler versions still deserve support, and which of the AIX hacks we had been carrying still need to be there based on that analysis. For context, we've been pruning support for extinct-in-the-wild OS versions pretty aggressively over the past couple of years, and I'd expect to apply the same standard to AIX. regards, tom lane