On 08/04/2014 12:54 PM, Seref Arikan wrote:
Greetings,
I hope this is the right group to ask this question; apologies if this
should go the general or some other list.

I have multiple shared libraries that can be called from C that I'd like to
use from a C based postgresql function.

These libraries perform some expensive initialization and they require the
C code to properly release resources when the library is no longer needed.

This means that I need a mechanism to keep a session level pointer to a
library, initialize it when it is called first from a C based function and
dispose the library properly when the session ends (and terminated due to a
problem) I would like to keep the libraries available as long as the
session is alive, so multiple calls are supposed to avoid
initialization/disposal costs every time.

I could probably use a temp table as a container for the initalization and
even pointer values (sounds dirty) but I have no idea how to hook to
session end to clean up when session ends.

What would be a good strategy here?

Define a function called _PG_init() in your C extension. PostgreSQL will call it once, when the library is loaded into the backend. (The time it's loaded will depend on whether the library is listed in shared_preload_libraries, local_preload_libraries, or neither.)

Are you sure you need to do any cleanup? When the session ends, the backend process will terminate, which will close any open files and release memory that the library might be holding. If that's not enough, and the library really needs to do more complicated clean up, then you can register a callback with on_proc_exit().

Look at the C extensions in the PostgreSQL source tree's contrib directory for examples of _PG_init() and on_proc_exit().

- Heikki



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