Re: Re: In-core regression tests for replication, cascading, archiving, PITR, etc.
| От | Alvaro Herrera |
|---|---|
| Тема | Re: Re: In-core regression tests for replication, cascading, archiving, PITR, etc. |
| Дата | |
| Msg-id | 20151125015515.GL4073@alvherre.pgsql обсуждение исходный текст |
| Ответ на | Re: Re: In-core regression tests for replication, cascading, archiving, PITR, etc. (Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>) |
| Ответы |
Re: Re: In-core regression tests for replication,
cascading, archiving, PITR, etc.
|
| Список | pgsql-hackers |
Michael Paquier wrote: > On Wed, Nov 25, 2015 at 6:22 AM, Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com> > wrote: > > > Michael Paquier wrote: > > This looks great as a starting point. I think we should make TestLib > > depend on PostgresNode instead of the other way around. I will have a > > look at that (I realize this means messing with the existing tests). > > Makes sense. My thoughts following that is that we should keep a track of > the nodes started as an array which is part of TestLib, with PGHOST set > once at startup using tempdir_short. That's surely an refactoring patch > somewhat independent of the recovery test suite. I would not mind writing > something among those lines if needed. OK, please do. We can split this up in two patches: one introducing PostgresNode (+ RecursiveCopy) together with the refactoring of existing test code, and a subsequent one introducing RecoveryTest and the corresponding subdir. Sounds good? > > > I have also arrived at the conclusion that it is not really worth > > > adding a node status flag in PostgresNode because the port number > > > saved there is sufficient when doing free port lookup, and the list of > > > nodes used in a recovery test are saved in an array. > > > > I don't disagree with this in principle, but I think the design that you > > get a new PostgresNode object by calling get_free_port is strange. I > > think the port lookup code should be part of either TestLib or > > PostgresNode, not RecoveryTest. > > I'd vote for TestLib. I have written PostgresNode this way to allow users > to set up arbitrary port numbers if they'd like to do so. That's more > flexible. That works for me. -- Álvaro Herrera http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/ PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services
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