Re: pg_upgrade failing for 200+ million Large Objects
От | Jan Wieck |
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Тема | Re: pg_upgrade failing for 200+ million Large Objects |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 6cccaa33-c263-b8a2-b064-985605d33d25@wi3ck.info обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: pg_upgrade failing for 200+ million Large Objects (Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>) |
Ответы |
Re: pg_upgrade failing for 200+ million Large Objects
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Список | pgsql-hackers |
On 3/23/21 2:59 PM, Tom Lane wrote: > Jan Wieck <jan@wi3ck.info> writes: >> On 3/23/21 2:35 PM, Tom Lane wrote: >>> If you're passing multiple options, that is >>> --pg-dump-options "--foo=x --bar=y" >>> it seems just horribly fragile. Lose the double quotes and suddenly >>> --bar is a separate option to pg_upgrade itself, not part of the argument >>> for the previous option. That's pretty easy to do when passing things >>> through shell scripts, too. > >> ... which would be all really easy if pg_upgrade wouldn't be assembling >> a shell script string to pass into parallel_exec_prog() by itself. > > No, what I was worried about is shell script(s) that invoke pg_upgrade > and have to pass down some of these options through multiple levels of > option parsing. The problem here is that pg_upgrade itself is invoking a shell again. It is not assembling an array of arguments to pass into exec*(). I'd be a happy camper if it did the latter. But as things are we'd have to add full shell escapeing for arbitrary strings. > > BTW, it doesn't seem like the "pg-" prefix has any value-add here, > so maybe "--dump-option" and "--restore-option" would be suitable > spellings. Agreed. Regards, Jan -- Jan Wieck Principle Database Engineer Amazon Web Services
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