1) adds NetBSD shared lib support on both ELF and a.out platforms
2) replaces "-L$(LIBPQDIR) -lpq" with "$(LIBPQ)" defined in
Makefile.global. This makes it much easier to build stuff in
the source tree after you've already installed the libraries.
3) adds TEMPLATEDIR in Makefile.global that indicates where the
database templates are stored. This separates the template files
from real libraries that are installed in $(LIBDIR).
4) changes include order of <readline/readline.h> and <readline.h>.
The latest GNU readline installs its headers under a readline
subdirectory.
In addition to applying the patch below the following files need to be copied:
backend/port/dynloader:
bsd.h -> netbsd.h
bsd.c -> netbsd.c
include/port:
bsd.h -> netbsd.h
makefiles:
Makefile.bsd -> Makefile.netbsd
It would be great to see this incorporated into the source tree before
the 7.0 release is cut.
Thanks!
-- Johnny C. Lam <lamj@stat.cmu.edu>
compiler warnings caused by lack of extern declarations in extern.h.
I believe the remaining gcc warnings here would go away if the ecpg
grammar could be tweaked so it doesn't use REJECT ...
quote_postgres(...) in ecpglib.c.
The code in CVS reads:
quote_postgres(char *arg, int lineno)
{
char *res = (char *) ecpg_alloc(2 * strlen(arg) + 3, lineno);
int i,
ri = 0;
if (!res)
return (res);
res[ri++] = '\'';
for (i = 0, ri=0; arg[i]; i++, ri++)
{
switch (arg[i])
{
case '\'':
res[ri++] = '\'';
break;
case '\\':
res[ri++] = '\\';
break;
default:
;
}
The problem here is that ri is reset to 0, thus overwriting the initial
quote.
Stephen Birch
a ".pgc " extension. The second patch fixes a coredump when there is
more than one input file (in that case, cur and types were not set to
NULL before processing the second f ile)
The patch below modifies the accepted grammar of ecpg to accept
FETCH [direction] [amount] cursor name
i.e. the IN|FROM clause becomes optional (as in Oracle and Informix).
This removes the incompatibility mentioned in section "Porting From
Other RDBMS Packages" p169, PostgreSQL Programmer's Guide. The grammar
is modified in such a way as to avoid shift/reduce conflicts. It does
not accept the statement "EXEC SQL FETCH;" anymore, as the old grammar
did (this seems to be a bug of the old grammar anyway).
This patch cleans up the handling of space characters in the scanner;
some patte rns require \n to be in {space}, some do not. A second fix is
the handling of cpp continuati on lines; the old pattern did not match
these. The parser is patched to fix an off-by-one error in the #line
directives. The pa rser is also enhanced to report the correct location
of errors in declarations in the "E XEC SQL DECLARE SECTION". Finally,
some right recursions in the parser were replaced by left-recursions.
This patch adds preprocessor directives to ecpg; in particular
EXEC SQL IFDEF, EXEC SQL IFNDEF, EXEC SQL ELSE, EXEC SQL ELIF and EXEC SQL ENDIF
"EXEC SQL IFDEF" is used with defines made with "EXEC SQL DEFINE" and
defines, specified on the command line with -D. Defines, specified on
the command line are persistent across multiple input files. Defines can
be nested up to a maximum level of 128 (see patch). There is a fair
amount of error checking to make sure directives are matched properly. I
need preprocessor directives for porting code, that is written for an
Informix database, to a PostgreSQL database, while maintaining
compatibility with the original code. I decided not to extend the
already large ecpg grammar. Everything is done in the scanner by adding
some states, e.g. to skip all input except newlines and directives. The
preprocessor commands are compatible with Informix. Oracle uses a cpp
replacement.
Rene Hogendoorn
eliminating some wildly inconsistent coding in various parts of the
system. I set MAXPGPATH = 1024 in config.h.in. If anyone is really
convinced that there ought to be a configure-time test to set the
value, go right ahead ... but I think it's a waste of time.
fix recently applied to backend's lexer). I see that YY_USES_REJECT
still gets defined for this lexer, which means it's going to have trouble
parsing really long tokens. Not sure if it's worth doing anything about
that or not; I don't have the interest right now to understand why
ecpg's additions to the syntax cause this problem...