[HACKERS] ALTER USER

2003-03-15 Thread Alvaro Herrera
Hackers,

One can alter a user to set a validity timestamp.  However, unless one
uses the ugly kludge of setting a date very far into the future, there's
no way to set this validity forever.

Should I make a patch to correct this?  Should be quite trivial.

-- 
Alvaro Herrera ()
"El dia que dejes de cambiar dejaras de vivir"

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Re: [HACKERS] Error message style guide

2003-03-15 Thread Tom Lane
Peter Eisentraut <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Some people were mentioning an error message style guide.  Here's a start
> of one that I put together a while ago.  Feel free to consider it.

Looks like a good start.  But you expected quibbles, right?  ;-)


> The main part of a message should be at most 72 characters long.  For
> embedded format specifiers (%s, %d, etc.), a reasonable estimate of
> the expected string should be taken into account.  The rest should be
> distributed to the detail and the hint parts.

This is not really workable to adhere to strictly.  For example, a
message that includes more than one user identifier (eg, a table and
column name) fails the test immediately since each name might be
NAMEDATALEN-1 long.  Even with only one identifier, I have nine
characters allowed for the error text ... less quotes and a space
makes six... less "ERROR:" leaves me with nothing.  Okay, so you said
"reasonable estimate" not "worst case", but unless you want to specify
what you think a reasonable estimate is, this guideline is useless.

I think a style guide should just say "Keep primary messages short".


> A message may not contain a newline or a tab.

This might work for primary messages given the "keep it short" dictum,
but it's quite unworkable for detail and hint messages --- we have some
of the latter that run to many lines.

How about something like "Avoid tabs.  Insert newlines as needed to keep
message lines shorter than X characters.  Keep in mind that client
code might reformat long messages for its own purposes, so don't rely on
text layout for legibility."


> Use quotes always to denote files, database objects, and other
> variables of a character-string nature.  Do not use them to mark up
> nonvariable items.

One thing that's been annoying me recently is that some of our messages
exhibit double quoting, eg 

regression=# select 'a' ### 'b';
ERROR:  Unable to identify an operator '###' for types '"unknown"' and '"unknown"'
You will have to retype this query using an explicit cast

The reason this particular case happens is that the elog call puts
(single) quotes around the result of format_type_be --- and the latter
puts double quotes around names that seem to need it, which include
mixed-case names and (as in this case) names that are also SQL keywords.
Individually each of these choices seems defensible, but the result is
mighty ugly.  How can we fix it?


> NOTE: This format encourages embedding data items into the message in
> grammatical positions instead of the old style 'invalid value: bar'.

I'm not sure that I like making messages be utterly dependent on the
presence of quotes to be decipherable.  Would you consider the above
message to be better phrased as, say,

ERROR: Unable to identify an infix operator "unknown" "###" "unknown"

Throw a few spaces and random characters into the type names, and this
gets very unreadable very fast.  The "invalid value: bar" style has the
advantage that the message text is pretty clearly separated from the
object being complained about.


> Do not end the message with a period.  Do not even think about ending
> a message with an exclamation point.

> RATIONALE: Avoiding punctuation makes it easier for client
> applications to embed the message into a variety of grammatical
> contexts.  Often, messages are not grammatically complete sentences
> anyway.  (And if they're long enough to be more than one sentence,
> split them up.)

This works for primary messages, I think, but not detail and hint
messages.  Can we use a different rule for detail/hint messages?


> Use lower case for message wording, including the first letter of the
> message.  Use upper case for SQL commands and key words if the message
> refers to the command string.

Again, this falls down for multi-sentence hints.


> Instead of multiple sentences, consider using semicolons or commas.

Here's an example of an actual hint in the present sources.  Do you
really want to convert it into one run-on sentence?

This error does *not* mean that you have run out of disk space.

It occurs when either the system limit for the maximum number of
semaphore sets (SEMMNI), or the system wide maximum number of
semaphores (SEMMNS), would be exceeded.  You need to raise the
respective kernel parameter.  Alternatively, reduce PostgreSQL's
consumption of semaphores by reducing its max_connections parameter
(currently %d).

The PostgreSQL Administrator's Guide contains more information about
configuring your system for PostgreSQL.


> | could not open file %s (%m)

> RATIONALE: It would be difficult to account for all possible error codes
> to paste this into a single smooth sentence.  It also looks better and is
> more flexible than colons or dashes to separate the sentences

We almost uniformly use "could not open file %s: %m" for this now.  Is
the parenthesis style really better?  I don't find it more natural.  In
most cases, the %m part i

Re: No index maximum? (was Re: [HACKERS] No merge sort?)

2003-03-15 Thread Bruno Wolff III
On Fri, Mar 14, 2003 at 14:19:46 -0600,
  Taral <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Same setup, different query:
> 
> test=> explain select max(time) from test where id = '1';
> NOTICE:  QUERY PLAN:
> 
> Aggregate  (cost=5084.67..5084.67 rows=1 width=0)
>   ->  Index Scan using idx on test  (cost=0.00..5081.33 rows=1333 width=0)
> 
> Since the index is (id, time), why isn't the index being used to
> retrieve the maximum value?

It looks like an index scan is being done.

If the index was on (time, id) instead of (id, time), then you could get
a further speed up by rewriting the query as:
select time from test where id = '1' order by time desc limit 1;

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Re: [HACKERS] Roadmap for FE/BE protocol redesign

2003-03-15 Thread Emmanuel Charpentier
Justin Clift wrote:

[ ... ]

The problem Dave is suggesting this as a first attempt at a solution for 
is that with ODBC, a frontend (i.e. OpenOffice) asks the ODBC driver 
which columns are NULLable, etc.  And the ODBC driver is getting the 
info wrong, then passing back the incorrect info.
And that's probably why OpenOffice doesn't allow you to update a view, 
event if there are rules allowing this from psql ...

This, in my book is an EPITA for end users ...

So, when a person goes to insert a row into a table with a 
SERIAL/SEQUENCE based column, OpenOffice has been told the column isn't 
NULLable and forces the user to enter a value.  Voila, it doesn't work 
with sequences.  :(

It's likely possible to add to the ODBC driver some way of getting the 
info right, but Dave is also looking for a way of making this easier 
into the future for similar problems.  i.e. Let the database explicitly 
have info about what each column can do.
I'd second that, even if it takes time ...

	Emmanuel Charpentier

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Emmanuel Charpentier
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