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Tom Lane bc8036fc66 Support arrays of composite types, including the rowtypes of regular tables
and views (but not system catalogs, nor sequences or toast tables).  Get rid
of the hardwired convention that a type's array type is named exactly "_type",
instead using a new column pg_type.typarray to provide the linkage.  (It still
will be named "_type", though, except in odd corner cases such as
maximum-length type names.)

Along the way, make tracking of owner and schema dependencies for types more
uniform: a type directly created by the user has these dependencies, while a
table rowtype or auto-generated array type does not have them, but depends on
its parent object instead.

David Fetter, Andrew Dunstan, Tom Lane
2007-05-11 17:57:14 +00:00
config Better solution to the tr problem: use sed instead. Per Martijn and Andrew. 2006-11-30 22:21:24 +00:00
contrib Tweak hash index AM to use the new ReadOrZeroBuffer bufmgr API when fetching 2007-05-03 16:45:58 +00:00
doc Support arrays of composite types, including the rowtypes of regular tables 2007-05-11 17:57:14 +00:00
src Support arrays of composite types, including the rowtypes of regular tables 2007-05-11 17:57:14 +00:00
COPYRIGHT Update CVS HEAD for 2007 copyright. Back branches are typically not 2007-01-05 22:20:05 +00:00
GNUmakefile.in Replace useless uses of := by = in makefiles. 2007-02-09 15:56:00 +00:00
Makefile Remove remains of old depend target. 2007-01-20 17:16:17 +00:00
README Fix spectacular misspellings of procedural language names 2006-07-24 16:55:59 +00:00
README.CVS Some further editorializing on README.CVS. 2004-03-28 06:09:08 +00:00
aclocal.m4 Add new auto-detection of thread flags. 2004-04-23 18:15:55 +00:00
configure tas() support for Renesas' M32R processor. Kazuhiro Inaoka 2007-05-04 15:20:52 +00:00
configure.in tas() support for Renesas' M32R processor. Kazuhiro Inaoka 2007-05-04 15:20:52 +00:00

README

PostgreSQL Database Management System
=====================================
  
This directory contains the source code distribution of the PostgreSQL
database management system.

PostgreSQL is an advanced object-relational database management system
that supports an extended subset of the SQL standard, including
transactions, foreign keys, subqueries, triggers, user-defined types
and functions.  This distribution also contains C language bindings.

PostgreSQL has many language interfaces including some of the more
common listed below:

C++ - http://thaiopensource.org/development/libpqxx/
JDBC - http://jdbc.postgresql.org
ODBC - http://odbc.postgresql.org
Perl - http://search.cpan.org/~dbdpg/
PHP - http://www.php.net
Python - http://www.initd.org/
Ruby - http://ruby.scripting.ca/postgres/

Other language binding are available from a variety of contributing
parties.

PostgreSQL also has a great number of procedural languages available,
a short but not complete list is below:

PL/pgSQL - included in PostgreSQL source distribution
PL/Perl - included in PostgreSQL source distribution
PL/PHP - http://projects.commandprompt.com/projects/public/plphp
PL/Python - included in PostgreSQL source distribution
PL/Java - http://gborg.postgresql.org/project/pljava/projdisplay.php
PL/Tcl - included in PostgreSQL source distribution

See the file INSTALL for instructions on how to build and install
PostgreSQL.  That file also lists supported operating systems and
hardware platforms and contains information regarding any other
software packages that are required to build or run the PostgreSQL
system.  Changes between all PostgreSQL releases are recorded in the
file HISTORY.  Copyright and license information can be found in the
file COPYRIGHT.  A comprehensive documentation set is included in this
distribution; it can be read as described in the installation
instructions.

The latest version of this software may be obtained at
http://www.postgresql.org/download/.  For more information look at our
web site located at http://www.postgresql.org/.