On 8/27/12 12:40 PM, Robert Haas wrote:
On Sat, Aug 25, 2012 at 1:30 PM, David Johnston wrote:
>My internals knowledge is basically zero but it would seem that If you
>simply wanted the end-of-transaction result you could just record nothing
>during the transaction and then copy whatever values
On Mon, Aug 27, 2012 at 1:50 PM, Pavel Stehule wrote:
> I can't agree - why we need a some simple solution based on tools,
> that are available now? I don't think we have to be hurry in support
> own proprietary solutions - when isn't difficult do it just with
> available tools now.
Who said anyt
>
> Well, the point is that I think many people have requirements that are
> (1) different from each other and (2) more complicated than the
> simplest case we can come up with. Some people will want to log the
> application user (or some other piece of extra data); others won't.
> Some people wil
On Sat, Aug 25, 2012 at 1:30 PM, David Johnston wrote:
> My internals knowledge is basically zero but it would seem that If you
> simply wanted the end-of-transaction result you could just record nothing
> during the transaction and then copy whatever values are present at commit
> to whatever log
> -Original Message-
> From: Robert Haas [mailto:robertmh...@gmail.com]
> Sent: Saturday, August 25, 2012 12:46 PM
> To: David Johnston
> Cc: Jeff Davis; Vlad Arkhipov; pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
> Subject: Re: [HACKERS] temporal support patch
>
> On Mon, Aug 20
On Mon, Aug 20, 2012 at 7:17 PM, David Johnston wrote:
> Ideally the decision of whether to do so could be a client decision. Not
> storing intra-transaction changes is easier than storing all changes.
Not really. If you don't care about suppressing intra-transaction
changes, you can essentiall
Jeff Davis wrote:
> On Tue, 2012-08-21 at 17:07 -0500, Kevin Grittner wrote:
>> The fact that it has an unknown sequence number or timestamp for
>> purposes of ordering visibility of transactions doesn't mean you
>> can't show that it completed in an audit log. In other words, I
>> think the ne
On Tue, 2012-08-21 at 17:07 -0500, Kevin Grittner wrote:
> The fact that it has an unknown sequence number or timestamp for
> purposes of ordering visibility of transactions doesn't mean you
> can't show that it completed in an audit log. In other words, I
> think the needs for a temporal database
Alvaro Herrera wrote:
> I think there would need to be a way to also list transactions
> which are "in progress" -- this would include not only live
> transactions, but also all those transactions that have actually
> committed but are not yet listed as committed because their
> position in the
Gavin Flower wrote:
> So if I understand correctly...
>
> If there is a very long running transaction, say 1 hour, then all
> (or just some? - depending) transactions that nominally start and
> finish within that time, can not have definitive start times until
> the very long running transactio
Excerpts from Gavin Flower's message of mar ago 21 16:51:57 -0400 2012:
> On 22/08/12 02:16, Kevin Grittner wrote:
> > So, if you want to allow serializable temporal queries, the timing
> > of a read-write serializable transaction can't be locked down until
> > all overlapping read-write serializa
On 22/08/12 02:16, Kevin Grittner wrote:
Jeff Davis wrote:
On Mon, 2012-08-20 at 19:32 -0500, Kevin Grittner wrote:
Josh Berkus wrote:
This is sounding like a completely runaway spec on what should
be a simple feature.
I hate to contribute to scope creep (or in this case scope
screami
On Mon, Aug 20, 2012 at 09:33:45PM -0700, Jeff Davis wrote:
> On Mon, 2012-08-20 at 19:17 -0400, David Johnston wrote:
> > Ideally the decision of whether to do so could be a client
> > decision. Not storing intra-transaction changes is easier than
> > storing all changes. At worse you could stag
Jeff Davis wrote:
> On Mon, 2012-08-20 at 19:32 -0500, Kevin Grittner wrote:
>> Josh Berkus wrote:
>>
>>> This is sounding like a completely runaway spec on what should
>>> be a simple feature.
>>
>> I hate to contribute to scope creep (or in this case scope
>> screaming down the tracks at fu
I have written one approach to audit tables, available from
https://github.com/akaariai/pgsql_shadow_tables
The approach is that every table is backed by a similar audit table +
some meta information. The tables and triggers to update the audit
tables are managed by plpgsql procedures.
While
On 08/21/2012 01:52 PM, Jeff Davis wrote:
On Mon, 2012-08-20 at 16:32 -0700, Josh Berkus wrote:
Personally, I would prefer a tool which just made it simpler to build my
own triggers, and made it automatic for the history table to track
changes in the live table. I think anything we build which
On 08/21/2012 12:52 PM, Jeff Davis wrote:
On Mon, 2012-08-20 at 16:32 -0700, Josh Berkus wrote:
This is sounding like a completely runaway spec on what should be a
simple feature.
My feeling as well. However, we will eventually want to coalesce around
some best practices and make it easy and r
On 08/21/2012 12:52 PM, Jeff Davis wrote:
On Mon, 2012-08-20 at 16:32 -0700, Josh Berkus wrote:
This is sounding like a completely runaway spec on what should be a
simple feature.
My feeling as well. However, we will eventually want to coalesce around
some best practices and make it easy and r
On Mon, 2012-08-20 at 19:32 -0500, Kevin Grittner wrote:
> Josh Berkus wrote:
>
> > This is sounding like a completely runaway spec on what should be
> > a simple feature.
>
> I hate to contribute to scope creep (or in this case scope screaming
> down the tracks at full steam), but I've been w
On Mon, 2012-08-20 at 16:32 -0700, Josh Berkus wrote:
> This is sounding like a completely runaway spec on what should be a
> simple feature.
My feeling as well. However, we will eventually want to coalesce around
some best practices and make it easy and robust for "typical" cases.
> Personally,
On Mon, 2012-08-20 at 19:17 -0400, David Johnston wrote:
> Ideally the decision of whether to do so could be a client decision. Not
> storing intra-transaction changes is easier than storing all changes. At
> worse you could stage up all changed then simply fail to store all
> intermediate result
On Mon, 2012-08-20 at 17:04 -0400, Robert Haas wrote:
> On Sun, Aug 19, 2012 at 6:28 PM, Jeff Davis wrote:
> >> The other issue is how to handle multiple changes of the same record
> >> within the transaction. Should they be stored or not?
> >
> > In a typical audit log, I don't see any reason to.
Josh Berkus wrote:
> This is sounding like a completely runaway spec on what should be
> a simple feature.
I hate to contribute to scope creep (or in this case scope screaming
down the tracks at full steam), but I've been watching this with a
queasy feeling about interaction with Serializable
On 8/20/12 4:17 PM, David Johnston wrote:
> The issue with adding the PostgreSQL role to the database in this way is
> that you now can never delete that role or reassign it to another entity. I
> guess with temporal you could do so and basically have the identity-role
> relationship define over s
> -Original Message-
> From: pgsql-hackers-ow...@postgresql.org [mailto:pgsql-hackers-
> ow...@postgresql.org] On Behalf Of Robert Haas
> Sent: Monday, August 20, 2012 5:04 PM
> To: Jeff Davis
> Cc: Vlad Arkhipov; pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
> Subject: Re: [HACKERS] t
On Sun, Aug 19, 2012 at 6:28 PM, Jeff Davis wrote:
>> The other issue is how to handle multiple changes of the same record
>> within the transaction. Should they be stored or not?
>
> In a typical audit log, I don't see any reason to. The internals of a
> transaction should be implementation detai
>
> If there is some syntax that offers a convenient shorthand for WHERE,
> that's fine with me. Or using two tables, one called foo and one called
> foo_history, is also fine. But I don't want the DML syntax to introduce
> new mechanisms that aren't available without the fancy syntax (though
> new
On Mon, 2012-06-25 at 17:46 +0900, Vlad Arkhipov wrote:
> It's not sufficient to store only a period of validity for a row. If two
> transactions started in the same time change the same record, you have a
> problem with TSTZRANGE type because it's normalized to empty interval.
That's an intere
On 05/31/2012 11:52 AM, Jeff Davis wrote:
On Wed, 2012-05-16 at 23:14 +0200, Miroslav Šimulčík wrote:
Hi all,
as a part of my master's thesis I have created temporal support patch
for PostgreSQL. It enables the creation of special temporal tables
with entries versioning. Modifying operations (
On Mon, 2012-06-18 at 19:34 +0900, Vlad Arkhipov wrote:
> What's wrong with SPI/timetravel extension for system versioning?
> http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.1/static/contrib-spi.html
>
> We are heavily using system-versioned and application-time period
> tables in our enterprise products (most o
On 06/15/2012 03:59 PM, Jeff Davis wrote:
On Wed, 2012-06-13 at 23:10 +0200, Miroslav Šimulčík wrote:
I have working patch for postgresql version 9.0.4, but it needs
refactoring before i can submit it, because some parts don't
meet formatting requirements yet. And yes, changes are large, so it
On Wed, 2012-06-13 at 23:10 +0200, Miroslav Šimulčík wrote:
> I have working patch for postgresql version 9.0.4, but it needs
> refactoring before i can submit it, because some parts don't
> meet formatting requirements yet. And yes, changes are large, so it
> will be better to discuss design firs
On Wed, Jun 13, 2012 at 4:10 PM, Miroslav Šimulčík
wrote:
> I have working patch for postgresql version 9.0.4, but it needs refactoring
> before i can submit it, because some parts don't
> meet formatting requirements yet. And yes, changes are large, so it will be
> better to discuss design first
>
>
> * I'd very much like to see you make use of Range Types from 9.2; in
> particular, TSTZRANGE would be much better than holding two timestamps.
> If a standard requires you to display two timestamps in certain
> situations, perhaps you could use ranges internally and display the
> boundaries a
2012/5/30 Jim Nasby
> On 5/18/12 2:06 AM, Miroslav Šimulčík wrote:
>
>> - no data redundancy - in my extension current versions of entries are
>> stored only once in original table (in table_log - entries are inserted to
>> both original and log table)
>>
>
> That's not necessarily a benefit... i
There would be no problem to make my solution compatible with SQL 2011, but
the standard is not freely available. Can anybody provide me with this
standard?
2012/5/20 Pavel Stehule
> Hello
>
> 2012/5/18 Miroslav Šimulčík :
> > Hello.
> >
> > SQL 2011 standard wasn't available in time I started t
On Wed, 2012-05-16 at 23:14 +0200, Miroslav Šimulčík wrote:
> Hi all,
>
>
> as a part of my master's thesis I have created temporal support patch
> for PostgreSQL. It enables the creation of special temporal tables
> with entries versioning. Modifying operations (UPDATE, DELETE,
> TRUNCATE) on th
On 5/18/12 2:06 AM, Miroslav Šimulčík wrote:
- no data redundancy - in my extension current versions of entries are stored
only once in original table (in table_log - entries are inserted to both
original and log table)
That's not necessarily a benefit... it makes querying for both history *a
Hello
2012/5/18 Miroslav Šimulčík :
> Hello.
>
> SQL 2011 standard wasn't available in time I started this project so I built
> my implementation on older standards TSQL2 and SQL/Temporal, that were only
> available. None of these were accepted by ANSI/ISO commissions however.
>
> There is differe
On Wed, May 16, 2012 at 4:14 PM, Miroslav Šimulčík
wrote:
>
> This is only a illustration of main functionality. Later I can create a
> document about the design and implementation details, but first I need to
> know if such temporal features as described here, could be added to future
> versions
Hi,
yes you are right, storing old versions of entry to history table can be
handled with triggers and my solution also uses triggers to do that.
Advantage of my implementation is that user doesn't need to create all
necessary objects (triggers, history table, begin/end columns ...)
manually. He j
Hello.
SQL 2011 standard wasn't available in time I started this project so I
built my implementation on older standards TSQL2 and SQL/Temporal, that
were only available. None of these were accepted by ANSI/ISO commissions
however.
There is different syntax in SQL 2011 and it looks like one that
Miroslav Šimulcík wrote:
> as a part of my master's thesis I have created temporal support patch for
> PostgreSQL. It enables the
> creation of special temporal tables with entries versioning. Modifying
> operations (UPDATE, DELETE,
> TRUNCATE) on these tables don't cause permanent changes to ent
Hello.
Basically my implementation serve for the same thing as table_log extension -
entry versioning. It also uses history table and triggers to store old
versions of entries. After quick review of table_log extension, here is
comparison with my solution:
tale_log advantages compared to my solu
Hello
what is conformance of your solution with temporal extension in ANSI SQL 2011
http://www.slideshare.net/CraigBaumunk/temporal-extensions-tosql20112012010438
Regards
Pavel Stehule
2012/5/16 Miroslav Šimulčík :
> Hi all,
>
> as a part of my master's thesis I have created temporal support p
Hi all,
as a part of my master's thesis I have created temporal support patch for
PostgreSQL. It enables the creation of special temporal tables with entries
versioning. Modifying operations (UPDATE, DELETE, TRUNCATE) on these tables
don't cause permanent changes to entries, but create new version
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