On Sun, Mar 17, 2013 at 05:50:11PM -0700, Greg Smith wrote:
> As long as the feature is off by default, so that people have to
> turn it on to hit the biggest changed code paths, the exposure to
> potential bugs doesn't seem too bad. New WAL data is no fun, but
> it's not like this hasn't happened before.
With a potential 10-20% overhead, I am unclear who would enable this at
initdb time.
I assume a user would wait until they suspected corruption to turn it
on, and because it is only initdb-enabled, they would have to
dump/reload their cluster. The open question is whether this is a
usable feature as written, or whether we should wait until 9.4.
pg_upgrade can't handle this because the old/new clusters would have the
same catalog version number and the tablespace directory names would
conflict. Even if they are not using tablespaces, the old heap/index
files would not have checksums and therefore would throw an error as
soon as you accessed them. In fact, this feature is going to need
pg_upgrade changes to detect from pg_controldata that the old/new
clusters have the same checksum setting.
-- Bruce Momjian <bruce@momjian.us> http://momjian.us EnterpriseDB
http://enterprisedb.com
+ It's impossible for everything to be true. +