From: | Andrew Dunstan <andrew(at)dunslane(dot)net> |
---|---|
To: | Tom Lane <tgl(at)sss(dot)pgh(dot)pa(dot)us> |
Cc: | Reini Urban <rurban(at)x-ray(dot)at>, PostgreSQL-development <pgsql-hackers(at)postgresql(dot)org> |
Subject: | Re: rmtree() failure on Windows |
Date: | 2004-10-27 15:42:32 |
Message-ID: | 417FC1E8.4010102@dunslane.net |
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Lists: | pgsql-hackers pgsql-patches |
Tom Lane wrote:
>Andrew Dunstan <andrew(at)dunslane(dot)net> writes:
>
>
>>Before I tried anything like that I tried one more thing. I disabled the
>>background writer and the problem stopped. So now we know the "culprit".
>>
>>
>
>Okay. So what that says is that win32_open's claim to allow unlinking
>an open file is a lie; or at least, it does not work the way the
>equivalent facility on Unix does. It sounds to me like Windows is
>simply marking the open file as to be deleted on last close --- the
>directory entry remains present and so the directory can't be dropped
>either.
>
>
Looks that way to me too.
>One relatively low-impact workaround would be to force a checkpoint
>(on Windows only) during DROP DATABASE, just before we actually fire
>the rmtree() operation. The bgwriter is already coded to close all its
>open files after a checkpoint ...
>
>
>
>
Works for me. If someone gives me a patch I'll be happy to test it.
I did wonder if there should be a call that instead of forcing a flush
could tell bgwriter just to forget about the file(s) because we're
discarding them. But that was just idle speculation - I haven't looked
at bgwriter at all.
cheers
andrew
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