I think this proposal is a bit deadlocked now. - There are technical concerns about launching a server executable from within a client.
- There are conceptual concerns about promoting an embedded database mode. On the other hand: - Everyone would like to have a way to use psql (and other basic clients) in stand-alone mode. The compromise would be to not launch the server from within the client, but have client and server communicate over external mechanisms (e.g., Unix-domain socket). The concern about that was that it would open up standalone mode to accidental third-party connections. While there are some ways around that (socket in private directory), they are not easy and not portable. So standalone mode would became less robust and reliable overall. The only solutions I see are: 1. do nothing 2. do everything (i.e., existing terminal mode plus socket mode plus embedded mode), letting the user work out the differences Pick one. ;-) -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers