Re: First draft of PG 17 release notes
Joe Conway <mail@joeconway.com>
Commits
GET /api/v1/messages/:b64id/commits
the thread's linked commits as JSON, with link sources.
API reference →
-
Revert support for ALTER TABLE ... MERGE/SPLIT PARTITION(S) commands
- 3890d90c1508 18.0 cited
-
When creating materialized views, use REFRESH to load data.
- b4da732fd64e 17.0 cited
-
Revert temporal primary keys and foreign keys
- 8aee330af55d 17.0 cited
-
Avoid needless large memcpys in libpq socket writing
- c4ab7da60617 17.0 cited
-
Enhance nbtree ScalarArrayOp execution.
- 5bf748b86bc6 17.0 cited
-
Introduce a non-recursive JSON parser
- 3311ea86edc7 17.0 cited
-
Combine freezing and pruning steps in VACUUM
- 6dbb490261a6 17.0 cited
-
Allow SIGINT to cancel psql database reconnections.
- cafe1056558f 17.0 cited
-
Provide API for streaming relation data.
- b5a9b18cd0bc 17.0 cited
-
Add hash support functions and hash opclass for contrib/ltree.
- 485f0aa85995 17.0 cited
-
Pull up ANY-SUBLINK with the necessary lateral support.
- 9f133763961e 17.0 cited
-
Read WAL directly from WAL buffers.
- 91f2cae7a4e6 17.0 cited
-
Introduce the dynamic shared memory registry.
- 8b2bcf3f287c 17.0 cited
-
Add macros for looping through a List without a ListCell.
- 14dd0f27d7cd 17.0 cited
-
Support +/- infinity in the interval data type.
- 519fc1bd9e9d 17.0 cited
-
Extend ALTER OPERATOR to allow setting more optimization attributes.
- 2b5154beab79 17.0 cited
-
Consider cheap startup paths in add_paths_to_append_rel
- a8a968a8212e 17.0 cited
On 5/15/24 23:48, Andres Freund wrote: > On 2024-05-15 10:38:20 +0200, Alvaro Herrera wrote: >> I disagree with this. IMO the impact of the Sawada/Naylor change is >> likely to be enormous for people with large tables and large numbers of >> tuples to clean up (I know we've had a number of customers in this >> situation, I can't imagine any Postgres service provider that doesn't). >> The fact that maintenance_work_mem is no longer capped at 1GB is very >> important and I think we should mention that explicitly in the release >> notes, as setting it higher could make a big difference in vacuum run >> times. > > +many. > > We're having this debate every release. I think the ongoing reticence to note > performance improvements in the release notes is hurting Postgres. > > For one, performance improvements are one of the prime reason users > upgrade. Without them being noted anywhere more dense than the commit log, > it's very hard to figure out what improved for users. A halfway widely > applicable performance improvement is far more impactful than many of the > feature changes we do list in the release notes. many++ > For another, it's also very frustrating for developers that focus on > performance. The reticence to note their work, while noting other, far > smaller, things in the release notes, pretty much tells us that our work isn't > valued. agreed -- Joe Conway PostgreSQL Contributors Team RDS Open Source Databases Amazon Web Services: https://aws.amazon.com