Saturday, November 21, 2015

Announcing Release 4.16 of the PostgreSQL Buildfarm client


I have just released version 4.16 of the PostgreSQL Buildfarm client

It can be downloaded from http://www.pgbuildfarm.org/downloads/latest-client.tgz

Several bugs have been fixed, and there are these non-trivial changes:

  • capturing of TAP test logs
  • bin check enabled on Windows
  • rm_worktrees feature
  • an experimental module to run Sepgsql tests
  • try database shutdown following a start failure
  • report all PGBuild module versions to server

rm_worktrees is enabled by putting this in your config file:

rm_worktrees => 1,

The effect is that at the end of a run the checked out work tree is removed, leaving just the git repository, which in turn might be mostly linked to your HEAD branch if you use the git_use_workdirs option. Before a run, the work tree will be checked out again. The net effect is a significant saving in space used. with these two options, the additional space for each branch except when it's actually building is reduced to less than 30Mb. On crake, the git mirror, branch trees and cache now come in at about 1.5Gb. That's a lot less than it used to be. The additional cost of checking out the worktree each time is very modest.

Shutdown after a start failure tries to remedy a situation where we try to start the server, and don't detect that it has started, but it has in fact started. So now if we get a failure we try to shut down any server that might have started, just in case. This change is possibly redundant given the recent change where postgres detects that its data directory has disappeared and shuts down when it has, but it's probably worth having anyway.



Saturday, November 14, 2015

A record with all defaults

Fresh from yesterday's help file:

Say you want to insert a record into your table with all the default values set. Later on you'll update some of the values. You might want to do this so you can get the row's ID field. So you try this:
insert into mytable values () returning my_id;
but you find it doesn't work. VALUES isn't allowed to have an empty list. Here's what you do:
insert into mytable values (default) returning my_id;
This will insert the default value explicitly into first column in the table, and implicitly into all the other columns. It doesn't matter if any of the columns doesn't have an explicit default value set - in that case the default is NULL. Of course, that means this won't work if you have NOT NULL columns without a default set.

Sunday, November 8, 2015

Latest adventures with a buildfarm animal on Raspberry Pi 2

My buildfarm member axolotl, that runs (or ran) on a Raspberry Pi 2 running a Fedora 21 remix, died the other day, apparently with a corrupted file system.

While I'm trying to revive it, I thought I would try running the stock Fedora spin built for ARM, instead of a remix. This is pretty easy to do using the script found here. It looks like this is a bad idea, though. It's running so slowly just doing a "dnf update" that I wouldn't think of running a buildfarm member on it.

So, if I can't resuscitate the file system on the other SD card, I'll try a respin with a custom kernel again. There is someone maintaining a set here, which you can read about on the Raspberry Pi forums.

Update


fsck on the root partition managed to resuscitate it without apparent problems, So in the end I haven't had to jump thought more hoops.

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Keeping config files under version control - reprise

I recently blogged about the virtue of putting PostgreSQL config files under version control. My attention was drawn to etckeeper, and a day or so ago I started playing with it, and it seems pretty nice. If you keep your configs in /etc like Debian/Ubuntu, then just deploying etckeeper is probably all you need to do. But if you are using Fedora, Redhat, Centos, or anything where the config files aren't in /etc, it's a little bit harder. But not too much. I found a nice little script at serverfault that you can put in etckeeper's commit.d directory that seems to do the trick and happily pulls files outside /etc into the repository. This seems like quite a good solution.