Re: PL/pgSQL 2 - Mailing list pgsql-hackers
From | Pavel Stehule |
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Subject | Re: PL/pgSQL 2 |
Date | |
Msg-id | CAFj8pRBkrQwm02US8kZy39GfGkN_FE-yfVH6GF+=2Ggi3TJvyg@mail.gmail.com Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Re: PL/pgSQL 2 (Álvaro Hernández Tortosa <aht@nosys.es>) |
Responses |
Re: PL/pgSQL 2
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List | pgsql-hackers |
2014-09-02 11:40 GMT+02:00 Álvaro Hernández Tortosa <aht@nosys.es>:
OK, so this compatibility layer is tough. Knew that already ;) But on the other side, the syntax is similar to plpgsql, right? So what about just having a compatible syntax? It would be the first step to that compatibility layer, which could -or could not- be a long-term goal for postgres (having the whole layer).
On 02/09/14 06:40, Tom Lane wrote:Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com> writes:If someone came up with a convincing PL/SQL compatibility layer thenAs a case in point, EDB have spent quite a few man-years on their Oracle
it'd be worth considering adopting - when it was ready. But of course,
anyone who does the work for that is quite likely to want to sell it to
cashed-up Oracle users looking to save a few hundred grand on per-CPU
licensing.
compatibility layer; and it's still not a terribly exact match, according
to my colleagues who have looked at it. So that is a tarbaby I don't
personally care to touch ... even ignoring the fact that cutting off
EDB's air supply wouldn't be a good thing for the community to do.
regards, tom lane
I don't buy that having that would cut EDB's air supply. They're doing great, and they know how to take care of themselves, I'm sure ;) Besides that, "competition" is always positive, and I'm sure they'd be more benefited than harmed by postgres having that layer.
If we are to have another plpgsql-like language (like plpgsql2) and we could design it so it would attract many many users (let's not forget that Oracle may have around two orders of magnitude more users than pg), that would benefit us all greatly. Even if not perfect. Even if it is a longer project which spans more than one release. But just having the syntax (or most of it, maybe avoiding some complex unimplemented postgres features, if that required a huge effort) is a big win.
For 9.4, we have the media already saying "Postgres has NoSQL capabilities" (which is only partially true). For x.y we could have the media saying "Postgres adds Oracle compatibility" (which would be only partially true). But that brings a lot of users to postgres, and that helps us all.
Partial true can enforce so lot of people will hate postgres too. False promises are wrong
And also.... it could serve as a motivation point to implement those in-core missing features, too, that Oracle has.
If on the other hand we resign from attracting Oracle users, in a moment where non-Oracle databases are fighting for them..... and we lose here.... well, let's at least have a very compelling, attractive, in-core, blessed, language. Even disliking it myself, PL/JavaScript would be my #1 candidate there.
My 4 (already) cents,
Álvaro
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