Re: rmgr hooks and contrib/rmgr_hook - Mailing list pgsql-patches

From Simon Riggs
Subject Re: rmgr hooks and contrib/rmgr_hook
Date
Msg-id 1220345064.4371.275.camel@ebony.2ndQuadrant
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: rmgr hooks and contrib/rmgr_hook  (ITAGAKI Takahiro <itagaki.takahiro@oss.ntt.co.jp>)
List pgsql-patches
On Mon, 2008-09-01 at 12:42 +0900, ITAGAKI Takahiro wrote:
> Simon Riggs <simon@2ndQuadrant.com> wrote:
>
> > 1) A refactoring of calls to Rmgr code from xlog.c, and having isolated
> > the code for rmgrs then to allow rmgr plugins to modify and/or add rmgrs
> > to Postgres. Includes additional code to generate log messages so we can
> > see what is happening after plugin has executed.
>
> Why do we need to set rmgr_hook in _PG_init(), and add or mofify rmgrs
> in our hook functions? I think it is possible to modify RmgrTable
> directly in _PG_init() instead of to have rmgr_hook. If we can do so,
> the patch would be more simple, no? Am I missing something?

If we modify RmgrTable in _PG_init() then we would have to have that
structure available in all backends, which was a stated objective to
avoid. We would still need a fast access data structure for the
XLogInsert() check, so the RmgrTable would just be wasted space in all
normal backends. In the patch, plugin is only called when we call
RmgrInitialize(), so the memory is malloc'd only when required.

The other reason is that this way of doing things is common to most
other server hooks. It allows the loaded module to specify that there
will be a plugin, but for the server to determine when that is called.
Calling code at the time _PG_init() runs limits us to certain types of
activity.

--
 Simon Riggs           www.2ndQuadrant.com
 PostgreSQL Training, Services and Support


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