Re: A bug when use get_bit() function for a long bytea string
От | ilmari@ilmari.org (Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker) |
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Тема | Re: A bug when use get_bit() function for a long bytea string |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 87y2rdtuug.fsf@wibble.ilmari.org обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: A bug when use get_bit() function for a long bytea string (Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>) |
Ответы |
Re: A bug when use get_bit() function for a long bytea string
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Список | pgsql-hackers |
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> writes: > "Daniel Verite" <daniel@manitou-mail.org> writes: >> These 2 tests need to allocate big chunks of contiguous memory, so they >> might fail for lack of memory on tiny machines, and even when not failing, >> they're pretty slow to run. Are they worth the trouble? > > Yeah, I'd noticed those on previous readings of the patch. They'd almost > certainly fail on some of our older/smaller buildfarm members, so they're > not getting committed, even if they didn't require multiple seconds apiece > to run (even on a machine with plenty of memory). It's useful to have > them for initial testing though. Perl's test suite has a similar issue with tests for handling of huge strings, hashes, arrays, regexes etc. We've taken the approach of checking the environment variable PERL_TEST_MEMORY and skipping tests that need more than that many gigabytes. We currently have tests that check for values from 1 all the way up to 96 GiB. This would be trivial to do in the Postgres TAP tests, but something similar might feasible in the pg_regress too? > It'd be great if there was a way to test get_bit/set_bit on large > indexes without materializing a couple of multi-hundred-MB objects. > Can't think of one offhand though. For this usecase it might make sense to express the limit in megabytes, and have a policy for how much memory tests can assume without explicit opt-in from the developer or buildfarm animal. - ilmari -- "The surreality of the universe tends towards a maximum" -- Skud's Law "Never formulate a law or axiom that you're not prepared to live with the consequences of." -- Skud's Meta-Law
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