From: | Greg Stark <stark(at)enterprisedb(dot)com> |
---|---|
To: | David Fetter <david(at)fetter(dot)org> |
Cc: | pgsql-general(at)postgresql(dot)org |
Subject: | Re: Pet Peeves? |
Date: | 2009-02-03 17:48:51 |
Message-ID: | 4136ffa0902030948kd58c3d7y67a7eef6c431583c@mail.gmail.com |
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Lists: | pgsql-general |
On Thu, Jan 29, 2009 at 5:43 PM, David Fetter <david(at)fetter(dot)org> wrote:
>>
>> > * CTEs not yet integrated into the adjacency lists in pg_catalog,
>> > etc.
>>
>> I'm not sure what you're referring to here either.
>
> The DAG structures in pg_depend leap to mind. There's no view that
> shows the actual dependencies, except in the sense of, "Here's the
> edges. Figure it out for yourself."
I'm trying to write some recursive queries for pg_depend and pg_locks.
I think if we come up with some nice ones we might want to add them to
the system views.
pg_depend is actually pretty boring, you would see the same stuff if
you just did a DROP foo RESTRICT after all. I am finding that I'm
really wanting depth first searches which would be easier to read.
That would be interesting direction to head.
pg_locks would be a *lot* more interesting imho. It's awfully hard to
decipher the pg_locks table and find the important information buried
in lots of extraneous minor locks which aren't blocking anything.
However I'm finding it really hard to write anything useful for
pg_locks. It seems we're missing a lot of basic info in pg_locks and
basic infrastructure to make sense of it.
Notably, there's no indication of which lock wait queue the ungranted
locks are in. That means to find out what's blocking a lock would
require comparing every other lock to it and deciding whether it
conflicts.
I haven't thought hard about the pros and cons of adding more info to
pg_locks versus implementing redundant logic in SQL to mirror C code.
Neither seems terribly enticing offhand.
I wonder if anybody else has already implemented something like
lock_conflicts()?
--
greg
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