Re: How much work is a native Windows application? - Mailing list pgsql-hackers

From Jan Wieck
Subject Re: How much work is a native Windows application?
Date
Msg-id 200205091840.g49Ieu602053@saturn.janwieck.net
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: How much work is a native Windows application?  (cbbrowne@cbbrowne.com)
List pgsql-hackers
cbbrowne@cbbrowne.com wrote:
> > cbbrowne@cbbrowne.com wrote:
> >>> I think, and I know people are probably sick of me spouting
> >>> opinions, that if you want a Windows presence for PostgreSQL, then
> >>> we should write a real Win32 version.
> >>
> >> The crucial wrong word is the word "we."
>
> >> If _you_ want a Windows presence, then _you_ should write a real
> >> Win32 version.  That clearly attaches responsibility to someone who
> >> is interested.
>
> > I have already said that I am willing to write the pieces for a
> > Windows port.  The issue is changes in PostgreSQL required to do it.
>
> No, I don't think you understand.
>
> If you're planning to do a port, then _all_ changes are your
> responsibility.  Nobody ought to need to change PostgreSQL in order for
> you to write a Windows port; that, in fact, would be a waste of time,
> having several people working on something that should probably be done
> by one person.
   Who  said PostgreSQL shall not support any other OS than *NIX   or things that look alike?
   When I first used Postgres, it still had a VMS  port.   Well,   we  dropped  the VMS port at some point, when we
wherepretty   sure it was broken and nobody complained.
 
   Now we  face  the  fact  that  Microsoft  managed  to  create   something  useful  (other than a joystick or optical
mouse,I   mean Win2K).  And as a  logical  consequence  more  and  more   people ask for support of their OS.
 
   A  good  deal  of  effort  in the original Postgres was about   portability.  I hope we've not become a UNIX-only
show.


Jan

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