Обсуждение: where EXEC_BACKEND?
<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0"><tr><td style="font: inherit;" valign="top">hi,<br /><br />actually i tryto execute postgres step by step (on paper)<br />i don't retreive where EXEC_BACKEND is initialized<br />can any one helpme?<br />it is very important for me<br /><br />thanks<br /></td></tr></table><br />
abdelhak benmohamed wrote: > hi, > > actually i try to execute postgres step by step (on paper) > i don't retreive where EXEC_BACKEND is initialized > can any one help me? > it is very important for me > > thanks > > normally it is added to the CPP_FLAGS by configure, if needed (i.e. for the Windows gcc build), or by the Project (for the MSVC build). It's not defined in any include file. On Unix it is only ever used to test the way the Windows port works, and then you have to define it manually, e.g. by passing it in to configure via preset CPP_FLAGS. Standard Unix builds don't work this way. cheers andrew
abdelhak benmohamed wrote: > hi, > > actually i try to execute postgres step by step (on paper) > i don't retreive where EXEC_BACKEND is initialized > can any one help me? > it is very important for me Nowhere. If you want it, you have to define it manually in pg_config_manual.h. EXEC_BACKEND is a source code hack that allows the Unix build (which normally uses only fork() without exec()) to follow the same startup code as the Windows version (which uses CreateProcess(), equivalent to both fork() and exec()), allowing for better debuggability for those of us that do not use Windows. If you want to follow postmaster initialization on a POSIX platform, it's easier if you just assume that EXEC_BACKEND is not defined. -- Alvaro Herrera http://www.CommandPrompt.com/ The PostgreSQL Company - Command Prompt, Inc.