Thread

  1. Debian experimental packages of PostgreSQL 7.4beta4

    Oliver Elphick <olly@lfix.co.uk> — 2003-10-10T20:36:35Z

    Debian packages of PostgreSQL 7.4beta4 are available in the experimental
    section of the Debian archive.
    
    -- 
    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
                     ========================================
         "He that covereth his sins shall not prosper; but whoso
          confesseth and forsaketh them shall have mercy."      
                                             Proverbs 28:13 
    
    
    
  2. Redhat RPMs (Was: Debian experimental packages ofPostgreSQL 7.4beta4)

    Nigel J. Andrews <nandrews@investsystems.co.uk> — 2003-10-10T21:08:12Z

    On Fri, 10 Oct 2003, Oliver Elphick wrote:
    
    > Debian packages of PostgreSQL 7.4beta4 are available in the experimental
    > section of the Debian archive.
    
    One thing I've been thinking/worrying about recently is the upgrade
    process. Rest assured this isn't rehashing the pg_upgrade debate though.
    
    What I'm wondering about is that I'm faced with a production box that is
    installed with a Redhat system, that's run by someone else and they do things
    'by the book'. That is, software comes in RPM form, possibly RPMS form, but no
    way does it come in any other form since it's obviously not supported in that
    case. Now, we're coming up to the time when 7.4 is released, should I go to the
    extent of porting the db from 7.3 I'll be faced with the situation where the
    production db has to be brought down to do the upgrade which even after testing
    may fail in the process.  Factor into that that I'm sure the people admin-ing
    the box probably will not do this during a quiet time, i.e. middle of the
    night, I have a problem...unless the RPMs are relocatable.
    
    I've not looked at many RPMs but I must say that the few I have have never been
    relocatable. Can the postgresql RPMs not be made relocatable? At least in
    that case I could run the two versions concurrently rather than the admins be
    forced to shut 7.3 down, uninstall it, install 7.4, start it up and run the
    upgrade/load scripts before reenabling the application.
    
    If it were me I'd just use stow like I do on all my systems if only more
    software wouldn't assume it knew where it was going to be installed before
    configure and build, but that's a whole other gripe.
    
    
    -- 
    Nigel J. Andrews
    
    
    
  3. Re: Redhat RPMs (Was: Debian experimental packages

    Oliver Elphick <olly@lfix.co.uk> — 2003-10-10T22:17:53Z

    On Fri, 2003-10-10 at 22:08, Nigel J. Andrews wrote:
    > On Fri, 10 Oct 2003, Oliver Elphick wrote:
    > 
    > > Debian packages of PostgreSQL 7.4beta4 are available in the experimental
    > > section of the Debian archive.
    > 
    > One thing I've been thinking/worrying about recently is the upgrade
    > process. Rest assured this isn't rehashing the pg_upgrade debate though.
    > 
    > What I'm wondering about is that I'm faced with a production box that is
    > installed with a Redhat system, that's run by someone else and they do things
    > 'by the book'. That is, software comes in RPM form, possibly RPMS form, but no
    > way does it come in any other form since it's obviously not supported in that
    > case. Now, we're coming up to the time when 7.4 is released, should I go to the
    > extent of porting the db from 7.3 I'll be faced with the situation where the
    > production db has to be brought down to do the upgrade which even after testing
    > may fail in the process.  Factor into that that I'm sure the people admin-ing
    > the box probably will not do this during a quiet time, i.e. middle of the
    > night, I have a problem...unless the RPMs are relocatable.
    > 
    > I've not looked at many RPMs but I must say that the few I have have never been
    > relocatable. Can the postgresql RPMs not be made relocatable? At least in
    > that case I could run the two versions concurrently rather than the admins be
    > forced to shut 7.3 down, uninstall it, install 7.4, start it up and run the
    > upgrade/load scripts before reenabling the application.
    
    Well, I can't speak for the RPM builders, but I have been thinking about
    this issue in respect of the debs.
    
    I am not happy about the current situation for Debian upgrading, which
    seems to be pretty fragile.  There are a fair number of bug reports from
    people for whom the upgrade has barfed in some way or other.  The
    situation for RPMs is even worse, since the installation scripts are far
    more rigidly constrained than are the Debian installation scripts.  Of
    course, that's why Lamar and I would be so happy to see a working
    pg_upgrade tool.  But there's no prospect of that in even the medium
    term, as far as I can see.
    
    Your suggestion of parallel installations is the solution I have been
    considering.  If the new package could be installed alongside the old,
    there would be no need to upgrade the data during installation and no
    danger of data loss.
    
    Another reason for considering this is for the benefit of people who
    want to run multiple versions.  Perhaps they have an application which
    is live and they want to keep that going while they update its code for
    use with the new PostgreSQL; it will be much easier for them if the two
    versions can be installed side by side as packages.  Other users may
    have multiple database users, who want to use different software
    versions.
    
    For that to work, however, we need a mechanism for assigning a port to
    each package and database and for determining which version of the
    client software each user will get.  So that means that in each package,
    psql must be renamed psql-7.3, psql-7.4 and so on.  Then psql becomes a
    soft link to the default psql version.  Debian's alternatives system
    (update-alternatives(8)) provides a convenient mechanism for making
    those soft links if there is a single systemwide default, but not if
    there are different users who want different versions.  I don't know if
    Red Hat has anything similar.
    
    At the same time, I would like to make the packages cope with multiple
    database structures, which are also needed by ISPs and others who need
    to charge users for space used.
    
    Assuming multiple versions installed simultaneously, with multiple
    data/base structures
    
    DB struct
    owner          PGDATA               Version           PGPORT
    
    fred         /var/lib/pg/fred       7.3               5433
    george       /var/lib/pg/george     7.4               5434
    harry        /var/lib/pg/harry      7.4               5435
    
    then the packages need to provide the means for each user to get the
    right PGPORT and the appropriate client software to access that port.
    
    I haven't got any further than this, but I wonder if this is something
    that would be useful to the whole project and not just to the
    distributions.  Any comments?
    
    -- 
    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
                     ========================================
         "He that covereth his sins shall not prosper; but whoso
          confesseth and forsaketh them shall have mercy."      
                                             Proverbs 28:13 
    
    
    
  4. Re: Redhat RPMs

    Chris Browne <cbbrowne@acm.org> — 2003-10-11T00:52:29Z

    Oops! nandrews@investsystems.co.uk ("Nigel J. Andrews") was seen spray-painting on a wall:
    > I've not looked at many RPMs but I must say that the few I have have
    > never been relocatable. Can the postgresql RPMs not be made
    > relocatable?
    
    Unfortunately, relocation would have to include the init scripts, and
    that would be pretty hairy.  The notion of "relocatable RPMs" came up
    early in its design, but the only case where that will be particularly
    usable is if the components are mostly binaries that only make
    relative path references.  That situation is unusual, to say the
    least.
    -- 
    wm(X,Y):-write(X),write('@'),write(Y). wm('aa454','freenet.carleton.ca').
    http://www.ntlug.org/~cbbrowne/postgresql.html
    MICROS~1 is not the answer.
    MICROS~1 is the question.
    NO (or Linux) is the answer.
    
    
  5. Re: Redhat RPMs (Was: Debian experimental packages

    Andrew Sullivan <andrew@libertyrms.info> — 2003-10-11T23:28:54Z

    On Fri, Oct 10, 2003 at 11:17:53PM +0100, Oliver Elphick wrote:
    > I haven't got any further than this, but I wonder if this is something
    > that would be useful to the whole project and not just to the
    > distributions.  Any comments?
    
    None except that this is more or less how we manage multiple
    installations and back ends in our test and production environments. 
    It works pretty well.  I also know that Tom Lane uses something again
    similar in order to support the apparently limitless different
    permutations of installations he has available at the touch of '.
    filename'.
    
    A
    
    -- 
    ----
    Andrew Sullivan                         204-4141 Yonge Street
    Afilias Canada                        Toronto, Ontario Canada
    <andrew@libertyrms.info>                              M2P 2A8
                                             +1 416 646 3304 x110
    
    
    
  6. Re: Redhat RPMs (Was: Debian experimental packages

    Oliver Elphick <olly@lfix.co.uk> — 2003-10-12T09:21:39Z

    On Sun, 2003-10-12 at 00:28, Andrew Sullivan wrote:
    > On Fri, Oct 10, 2003 at 11:17:53PM +0100, Oliver Elphick wrote:
    > > I haven't got any further than this, but I wonder if this is something
    > > that would be useful to the whole project and not just to the
    > > distributions.  Any comments?
    > 
    > None except that this is more or less how we manage multiple
    > installations and back ends in our test and production environments. 
    > It works pretty well.  I also know that Tom Lane uses something again
    > similar in order to support the apparently limitless different
    > permutations of installations he has available at the touch of '.
    > filename'.
    
    I imagine a lot of people have such in-house set-ups.  The question is
    whether the project itself should provide the structure to do it.
    
    -- 
    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
                     ========================================
         "Blessed is the man who makes the LORD his trust, 
          who does not look to the proud, to those who turn 
          aside to false gods."            Psalms 40:4 
    
    
    
  7. Re: Redhat RPMs (Was: Debian experimental packages

    Martijn van Oosterhout <kleptog@svana.org> — 2003-10-12T09:32:06Z

    On Sun, Oct 12, 2003 at 10:21:39AM +0100, Oliver Elphick wrote:
    > I imagine a lot of people have such in-house set-ups.  The question is
    > whether the project itself should provide the structure to do it.
    
    I'd love to have something like this. It'd be really useful to be able to
    install multiple versions simultaneously for testing migrations and such.
    The main issue I can see is that if the port number is not predicatable that
    connections from other machines won't work as expected any more.
    
    That could be solved by some kind of meta-server but that has other issues.
    
    Good luck
    -- 
    Martijn van Oosterhout   <kleptog@svana.org>   http://svana.org/kleptog/
    > "All that is needed for the forces of evil to triumph is for enough good
    > men to do nothing." - Edmond Burke
    > "The penalty good people pay for not being interested in politics is to be
    > governed by people worse than themselves." - Plato
    
  8. Re: Redhat RPMs (Was: Debian experimental packages

    Andrew Sullivan <andrew@libertyrms.info> — 2003-10-12T19:34:48Z

    On Sun, Oct 12, 2003 at 10:21:39AM +0100, Oliver Elphick wrote:
    > I imagine a lot of people have such in-house set-ups.  The question is
    > whether the project itself should provide the structure to do it.
    
    Oh, sorry, I intended that to be a note of support.  We do use it for
    precisely the reasons you mention, and I think it'd be very useful
    for packages to offer the same sort of facility.  I think it's a
    splendid idea.
    
    A
    
    -- 
    ----
    Andrew Sullivan                         204-4141 Yonge Street
    Afilias Canada                        Toronto, Ontario Canada
    <andrew@libertyrms.info>                              M2P 2A8
                                             +1 416 646 3304 x110
    
    
    
  9. Re: Redhat RPMs

    Lamar Owen <lowen@pari.edu> — 2003-10-14T17:15:18Z

    On Friday 10 October 2003 08:52 pm, Christopher Browne wrote:
    > Oops! nandrews@investsystems.co.uk ("Nigel J. Andrews") was seen 
    spray-painting on a wall:
    > > I've not looked at many RPMs but I must say that the few I have have
    > > never been relocatable. Can the postgresql RPMs not be made
    > > relocatable?
    
    > Unfortunately, relocation would have to include the init scripts, and
    > that would be pretty hairy.  The notion of "relocatable RPMs" came up
    > early in its design, but the only case where that will be particularly
    > usable is if the components are mostly binaries that only make
    > relative path references.  That situation is unusual, to say the
    > least.
    
    I've been watching this discussion with interest (well, I _am_ the RPM 
    maintainer, after all) and have to say that it has been thought of before.  
    It wasn't at that time implemented due to political factors (read: the then 
    Red Hat maintainer (@redhat.com) refused to include such support even if I 
    had built it).  But I did go through the design phase.  If everyone can be 
    patient, I'll try to go back into my archives and dig out the design doc I 
    put together way back then.  In the meantime, I'd like to hear people's 
    ideas.  As alternatives (debian-style) are fully supported in later Red Hat 
    (and the new Fedora Core) releases, a scheme that uses alternatives would be 
    ok.
    
    Be sure to post to the pgsql-ports list instead of pgsql-general, though.  If 
    the list server will accept it, reply-to has been set to pgsql-ports.
    -- 
    Lamar Owen
    Director of Information Technology
    Pisgah Astronomical Research Institute
    1 PARI Drive
    Rosman, NC  28772
    (828)862-5554
    www.pari.edu