Re: which version? old user coming back.... - Mailing list pgsql-general

From developer@wexwarez.com
Subject Re: which version? old user coming back....
Date
Msg-id 3457.192.168.1.245.1164490697.squirrel@mail.wexwarez.com
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: which version? old user coming back....  (Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>)
Responses Re: which version? old user coming back....  (Ron Mayer <rm_pg@cheapcomplexdevices.com>)
Re: which version? old user coming back....  (Martijn van Oosterhout <kleptog@svana.org>)
List pgsql-general
Thanks for the reply.

> developer@wexwarez.com writes:
>> 1)Do I run these old versions on my linux servers and the new version
>> 8.1x
>> for development?  If I do this will I have to constantly battle
>> compatibility issues when going from development to the production
>> servers?  Will it be a big headache?  Will I be missing out on major
>> performance or features?
>
> No, yes, yes, and yes.  You do not want to be running PG 7.anything
> anymore if you can help it.  If your intention is to go into production
> very soon, standardize on 8.1.x ... if your production release date is a
> few months out, you'd be doing yourself a favor to adopt 8.2 now.
> (8.2RC1 should be available by Monday.)

Is 8.2 that much different from 8.1?  The change log seems to indicate an
easy upgrade using pg dump.  I really need stability, is 8.2 really there
yet?

>
>> 2)Is there a reliable way to install 8.1x on debian and centos using apt
>> and yum?
>
> Look into Debian unstable, or if you are partial to Red Hat-derived
> stuff look into Fedora.

I have and if it is there I can't find it.
>
>> 3)Should I just compile from source on the linux boxes?  Should I expect
>> any problems with this even on the old 2.4 kernel?
>
> I'd advise you to be using a 2.6 kernel at this point, too.  I don't
> know what the Centos guys have in mind as a schedule for releasing
> a 2.6-based distro, but again Fedora is at least as good a bet if you
> want a Red Hat based distro without official Red Hat support.
>
I agree with your sentiments on 2.6.  The Centos 4 is a 2.6 kernel,
however the debian server I am using is 2.4 just because it has been
around for a while and I probably can't change that for another year.  I
assume 8 will still work on 2.4 though.


>             regards, tom lane
>
> ---------------------------(end of broadcast)---------------------------
> TIP 9: In versions below 8.0, the planner will ignore your desire to
>        choose an index scan if your joining column's datatypes do not
>        match
>



pgsql-general by date:

Previous
From: Stephen Harris
Date:
Subject: Re: which version? old user coming back....
Next
From: novnov
Date:
Subject: Editing contrib modules which are loaded by default?