On Thu, 2011-07-07 at 23:21 -0700, Darren Duncan wrote:
> I think an even better way to support this is would be based on Postgres 
> having 
> support for directly using multiple databases within the same SQL session at 
> once, as if namespaces were another level deep, the first level being the 
> databases, the second level the schemas, and the third level the schema 
> objects.
> 
> Kind of like what the SQL standard defines its catalog/schema/object 
> namespaces.
> 
> This instead of needing to use federating or that contrib module to use 
> multiple 
> Pg databases of the same cluster at once.
> 
> Under this scenario, we make the property of a database being read-only or 
> read-write for the current SQL session associated with a database rather than 
> the whole SQL session.  A given transaction can read from any database but 
> can 
> only make changes to the ones not read-only.
> 
> Also, the proper way to do temporary tables would be to put them in another 
> database than the main one, where the whole other database has the property 
> of 
> being temporary.
> 
> Under this scenario, there would be separate system catalogs for each 
> database, 
> and so the ones for read-only databases are read-only, and the ones for other 
> databases aren't.
> 
> Then the system catalog itself fundamentally isn't more complicated, per 
> database, and anything extra to handle cross-database queries or whatever, if 
> anything, is a separate layer.  Code that only deals with a single database 
> at 
> once would be an optimized situation and perform no worse than it does now.

One challenge that jumps to mind here is that an Oid would need to
become a pair (catalog, oid). Even if the end result isn't much more
complex, getting there is not trivial.

> See also how SQLite works; this "mount" being analogous to their "attach".

I'm not sure SQLite is the best example. It has a radically different
architecture.

Regards,
        Jeff Davis


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